Boomer Sooner!

It was good to be an OU fan last night as the Sooners pretty well dominated a very good Missouri team. I was not sure we would be able to beat them twice in the same season. It is amazing that Bob Stoops has now won his 5th Big XII championship with his 5th different starting quarterback. I would not be shocked if his 6th championship comes under the current quarterback.

Meanwhile, the BCS has been exposed as ridiculous at a whole other level. (Check out this poll at espn.com where more than a quarter of a million people have voted and more than 80% would approve of a playoff. Apparently the one place where public opinion does not rule is in college football.) I will not even make the case for OU to be in the national championship game. So many teams can make a good argument for why they should be in it this year, that it is almost absurd. I will just say that I would, of course, love to see OU playing for the championship and I think that they would give whoever they played a run for their money. But this afternoon fans of Ohio State, LSU, Georgia, Virginia-Tech, USC, Kansas, Missouri, Hawaii, (insert your team’s name here) are all saying the same thing. No matter what happens it will probably be tough to say with a straight face that there is a consensus “best team in the country” when the season is over.

Either way, just as long as we don’t play Boise State in the Fiesta Bowl, I will be happy!

Friday Shout Out to Bobby Gruenewald

This week’s Friday Shout Out goes out to Bobby Gruenewald. Bobby is the “Pastor, Innovational Leader” at LifeChurch.tv. He is also one of the co-authors of Swerve, LifeChurch.tv’s blog that deals with “leadership, technology, and innovation.”

Ok, Bobby, here is how this works. You have received this week’s “Friday Shout Out.” All you have to do now is shout back. I would particularly be interested to hear what role you think communal formation, especially small group accountability, will play in the internet church, or in online communities in general. Do you prefer physical gatherings for more vulnerable things like holding one another accountable for growing in faith, or do you see potential for online community that could not be met through more conventional small groups? These are just some things I would be particularly interested to hear your thoughts on, but the microphone is yours! You are free to say whatever you like, all you really have to do is shout back!

Praise God from Whom all Blessings Flow!

I know I have been off-line for awhile. I apologize for the absence. I had a wonderful Thanksgiving with both sides of our family. It was a relaxing time and great to reconnect with family. The best part of the vacation was when my dad and I teamed up against my brother in Axis and Allies (the board game that my brother always destroyed me at when we played). Although we didn’t get to finish the game, we were beating him pretty bad.
Brad, my brother, might see that a little differently… but this isn’t his blog.

This week I went to Canyon Camp for my last round of Board of Ordained Ministry Interviews. I had my interview at 10:00am this morning, and I was approved for ordination at this Annual Conference. The process towards ordination has been going on so long, I think I had sort of become numb to how much it meant to me. When I was called back into the room and told that they had voted unanimously for me to be ordained, I became a bit overwhelmed and teared up.

I have been especially aware today of what a blessing it is to be a member of the Oklahoma Annual Conference. I am excited to become a part of the covenant community at this next Annual Conference. Thank you to all of you who have helped me along the way, whether through giving advice and wisdom, support, encouragement, or a listening ear. I have been blessed by so many different people’s love and support. Thank you!

God is so good! May God’s love touch your life this day as it has graced mine.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Snoopy Thanksgiving

I am enjoying some time off and getting to relax with Melissa’s side of the family. We came to Norman Wednesday night and are spending Thanksgiving with a large group of family in Southwestern Oklahoma. Friday we will have lunch with the other half of Melissa’s family and then head to visit my family Friday in Tulsa.

When it is all said and done we will try to drive on every road in Oklahoma… But it is great to be with family! Blessings to you and yours this day!

Book Review Tab Is Updated!

I noticed today that a few people have recently clicked on the Book Reviews tab. In all honesty, I forgot it was there. So, the page was empty. But no more!

I have updated the Book Reviews Tab at the top right of the blog. If you click on the tab you will find a picture of every book that I have reviewed so far. From there you can click on the book to go directly to the review I posted. Also, if there is more than one post related to the book, they are all listed sequentially under the picture of the book.

If you have any suggestions as to how I can improve the Book Review section, I would be grateful for your feedback. (I would also gladly listen to any feedback or suggestions you have about the site in general.)

Redirect

Often other people say things and I think, I wish I had said that! So, I would like to redirect your attention to some excellent recent posts in the world of blogging:

What are you still doing here? You have a lot of reading to do!

Philip Yancey on John Wesley

I opened my inbox and to my delight had a message “Yancey: Wesley’s England.” I almost deleted it before it sunk in. The email is the daily CHRISTIANITY TODAY email. Yancey talks about reading Wesley’s journal on a recent trip to England. He compares his relatively comfortable experience traveling though England to Wesley’s much different experience. He also mildly criticizes Wesley, writing in the margins of Wesley’s Journal, “Lighten up, John!” It is an interesting and thought provoking piece, that is worth taking three minutes to read.

For those of you who do read, what is your reaction to Yancey’s take on Wesley?

Review: The Theology of John Wesley, Kenneth J. Collins

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The Theology of John Wesley - Collins

In The Theology of John Wesley: Holy Love and the Shape of Grace, Kenneth J. Collins, makes another important contribution to the area of Wesley Studies. Collins seeks to organize his discussion of Wesley’s theology around the “axial theme” of “holiness and grace” (6). The organization of the book is logical and easy to follow, essentially guiding the reader through the Way of Salvation, or more accurately (according to Collins’ view) the order of salvation.

A major strength of The Theology of John Wesley is Collins’ discussion of prevenient grace. Collins ends his summary of total depravity by arguing that “for those such as Wesley who followed the Augustinian tradition, the effects of the fall are so devastating that response-ability along the way of salvation is not a possibility at all unless God first of all sovereignly restores humanity through prevenient grace to some measure of the relation previously enjoyed” (73). It is almost as if Collins cannot help but talk about prevenient grace as soon as he has convinced the reader of the truth of human depravity. This is a thoroughly Wesleyan approach, as Wesley was only interested in discussing original sin in order to convince his audience of their need for the salvation which comes through Christ.

Collins beautifully distinguishes between Wesley and Calvin’s understanding of depravity and our dependence on grace, as well as their understandings of irresistible grace. Here Collins is at his best, “One of the chief differences… between Calvinism and Wesleyanism is at what point in the ordo salutis irresistible grace occurs. For Calvin, it is sanctifying grace that is irresistible; for Wesley, it is prevenient grace that ‘waiteth not for the call of man’” (82).

Collins’ discussion of the new birth has a particular sense of urgency. He notes that “What some Anglican clergy simply could not comprehend was how members of the church could employ the means of grace for years and yet lack regenerating, saving grace. But this presumption is precisely what Methodism called into question in the name of reform and in its concern for spreading scriptural holiness across the land” (212). In other words, the means of grace are not a pathway around the new birth. But rather, the new birth is the experience that results in the means of grace actually enabling the Christian’s growth in holiness.

In the section, “Did Wesley Maintain His Standard of the New Birth?” Collins rehashes arguments he has had with other contemporary Wesley scholars. Collins writes:

Moreover, if the Holy One does not transform the very nature of the children of God when their sins are forgiven… then they would shortly be committing the very same sins for which they had just asked forgiveness in the first place. Such a life would be marked not by liberty but by repeated failure and breaches of faith that would rob the conscience of what peace and comfort pertain to those who can cry, ‘Abba, Father….’ ‘But even babes in Christ,’ Wesley notes in 1766, ‘are so far perfect as not to commit sin’ (225-226).

Collins makes a thorough case for his reading of Wesley’s understanding of the new birth. There is, however, little distinction in Collins’ reading of Wesley between the new birth and entire sanctification, which is characteristic of Wesley’s thinking in the period immediately following Aldersgate. Collins understands the phrase “sin may remain, but no longer reign” to mean that after the new birth the temptation to sin remains, but that we do not act upon that temptation. If the struggle with actual sin is fully addressed in the new birth, then it would seem that entire sanctification, and indeed sanctification itself, would only involve the transformation of our wills. And yet, Wesley seems to change his view on this later in his ministry, recognizing that the victory over the power of sin may not be as thorough as he expressed it immediately after Aldersgate. One wonders, why did Wesley’s understanding change? In my own experience, and in the experience of many others, the struggle with sin’s reign has been much messier than this. Collins leaves me wanting to hear more about what happens when someone has experienced justification and the new birth and willfully sins? Is that possible in this account? If so, how does Collins (and more importantly, if Collins is right, Wesley) reckon with the reality that forgiven Christians sadly sometimes do commit sin? Ultimately, in Collins’ account, the Christian journey is abridged and the role of sanctification is minimized.

Collins is also occasionally too general in his comments and does not do justice to the arguments of those whom he disagrees with. Collins writes, for example, that “treatments of Wesley that have viewed him principally through the lens of some preferred theological tradition abound: Calvinism for Cell, Lutheran Pietism for Hildebrandt, Puritanism for Rupp, and the Eastern Fathers for Maddox” (4) Let’s take Randy Maddox’s Responsible Grace, for example, which Collins footnotes at the end of this comment. Collins’ comment seems to be an overstatement of what Maddox is trying to do in Responsible Grace. While Responsible Grace is a treatment of Wesley that views him through the lens of the Eastern Fathers, it does so in order to demonstrate their influence on Wesley’s thinking where it is particularly relevant. Maddux certainly does not read Wesley principally through this lens. Rather, Maddox gives an account of Wesley’s theology that demonstrates his understanding of Wesley’s orienting concern: responsible grace.

A wonderful contribution of The Theology of John Wesley is the “Today and Tomorrow” section that concludes each chapter. In these essays, Collins develops the contemporary implications of many of the ideas he explores. In “Conversion Revisited” Collins offers a particularly powerful reminder, “For E. Stanley Jones, the acid test of the validity of a Christian church is ‘whether it can not only convert people from the outside to membership but also produce conversion within its own membership. When it cannot do both, it is on its way out” (231-232).

Ultimately, The Theology of John Wesley: Holy Love and the Shape of Grace is an important contribution to Wesley Studies due to its passion for demonstrating the coherence and legitimacy of Wesleyan Theology, and its desire to see Wesley’s practical theology continue to benefit the church. Collins summarizes Wesley’s practical theology, “It proclaimed nothing less than liberty to the captives as well as the acceptable year of the Lord. It offered succor where there was neglect; hope where there was despair; love where there was none. Pastorally sensitive without diminishing the high calling of the gospel, Wesley developed a ministry that was marked by a sophisticated balance, a balance that evidenced nothing less than abiding holy love, the very emblem of historic Methodism itself” (330-331). This is a grand vision that is worthy of contemporary Wesleyan denominations’ best efforts to reclaim.

It’s Fall in Lamont




Fall

Originally uploaded by deeplycommitted

I had the best of intentions to take pictures of the beautiful fall foliage all week last week. I didn’t get to it until this afternoon, which means that many of the leaves had fallen off. However, there were still some pretty spectacular leaves. This picture was my favorite of the group I took the afternoon.

Every year I seem to appreciate the beauty and rhythm of the changing seasons more. I hope it has been a beautiful fall wherever you are too!