Fred B. Craddock’s Craddock Stories

It is very hard not to like Fred Craddock, one of today’s great homileticians. Craddock Stories is a fascinating collection of many of Craddock’s famous tales, anecdotes, and stories that will be as interesting to preachers who want to study how to tell a story as they will be to all readers who simply want to hear some great stories from a man who loves the gospel and the church.  This collection is edited by Mike Graves and Richard F. Ward and they are to be commended for doing a wonderful job.

Sermon illustration books are a dime a dozen, and I am pretty skeptical of most of them.  This work, however, along with R. Kent Hughes’ wonderful collection, is well worth having.  I have used stories from this book, never without saying, “Fred Craddock tells the story of…” first!  (I do believe it was Craddock who tells about going to a church to hear a student preach and hearing the student present one of Craddock’s life stories as if it were his and not Craddock’s!  If I recall, Craddock shook his hand afterward and commended the young man on his message, much to the minister’s embarrassment.)

Craddock is a master of understatement and of subtle illustration.  Oftentimes you hear a Craddock story and it grows more profound as it sinks in.  His stories are usually folksy, colloquial, and earthy.  They deal a lot with the church as a family, the radical forgiveness one finds in Christ, and our all-too-current church prejudices and foibles.  Craddock is a master or putting his finger on the blind spots of church culture yet he is never elitist or snobbish in doing so.  Rather, he can be brutally honest about his own contribution to these shortcomings.

If you would like to read a collection of fascinating, intelligent, thoughtful, provocative, and oh-so-interesting stories that will stir your heart and convict you over and over again, get Craddock Stories!

Thomas B. Allen’s George Washington, Spymaster:

I’ve just had the most delightful and informative reading experience that I’ve had in a long time:  Thomas B. Allen’s George Washington, Spymaster: How the Americans Outspied the British and Won the Revolutionary War.

My daughter has just returned from a week in D.C. with her grandparents and a few of her cousins.  This book comes to me as a gift  from my mother, purchased on that trip (at Mt. Vernon, of course).  I suppose this would be called a children’s book, but not necessarily so.

Published by National Geographic, this wonderful piece of writing is an attractive hardbound book with 148-pages of text, some wonderful drawings of Washington and others, some very informative appendices including espionage terminology, some 18th century American code keys, and things like that.  Sprinkled throughout the text and on the front cover, back cover, and lower edges of the book are some codes that you can de-code using the provided key (did you know Washington’s spy name was Agent 711?).

As for the content, it is very accessible, informative, and easy to read.  (I just read the whole thing in a 6-hour bus ride on the way home from camp.)

Allen tells the story of the espionage antics surrounding the Revolutionary War and particularly of Washington’s keen interest in the spying enterprise.  He reveals a number of fascinating stories of spies, counter-spies, moles, sleepers, and a whole host of other espionage personages.  Some of the stories get humorously confusing and you have to read carefully to know who exactly this or that person was spying for at the time…because, of course, who they started out spying for wasn’t who they always ended up spying for!

The story of Benedict Arnold and Washington’s near obsession with kidnapping him back from the British so that he could hang him was fascinating.  The various ways that information was passed at the time and particularly the discussion of invisible inks was enthralling.  And Washington’s own deft skill at the espionage game is impressed on the reader in convincing ways.

A fantastic and fun read that was a sheer pleasure.  You will love this book, I have no doubt.  Older kids will love it as well.

 

R. Kent & Barbara Hughes’ Liberating Ministry From The Success Syndrome:

Have you ever read a book and thought, “Man!  I would’ve done a lot of things differently had I read this book years ago!”?  Well, that’s exactly how I feel after having completed Kent and Barbara Hughes’ amazing work, Liberating Ministry From The Success Syndrome.  (Except that I’m also thinking, “I will be doing a lot of things differently after reading that book!”)

Originally published in the 70’s, this work has now been republished by Crossway, to whom I offer thanks!

The book comes out of the Hughes’ early ministry experience when Kent was the pastor of a fledgling church plant that seemed to be withering on the vine.  In his struggles and frustrations over this fact, it became clear to Kent and Barbara both that they had adopted a very modern-American, corporate, and unbiblical view of “success” and were judging themselves by this false standard.  Kent realized that he was viewing the ministry in terms of crass, secular career advancement instead of in the more biblical terms of “calling” and “faithfulness.”  So the Hughes went on a journey to discover how exactly the Bible defines “success.”  This book is the fruit of their labors, and readers will find themselves richer for their experiences.

On a personal note, this book could not have come at a better time in my own life.  I picked it up a few weeks ago from the Beeson Divinity School bookstore while there for my brother Condy’s DMin. graduation.  It is the right word at the right time for this pastor, and my wife, to whom I read a great deal of it, concurs wholeheartedly.  We both found ourselves time and again coming under deep conviction over our own view of ministry and success.  In truth, without wanting to lapse into overstatement, I believe that I came across this book providentially.  There are few works I’ve read in the last few years that have upset my apple cart quite like this book.

Hughes came to see that he was judging success almost completely by the size of his church.  He came to see the emptiness and shallowness of this standard, concluding instead that success in ministry is judged by faithfulness to God and the call that He places on our lives.  Hughes would go on to pastor a large church and have a tremendous ministry at College Church in Wheaton, but this in no way negates what he’s written here.  On the contrary, R. Kent Hughes (now retired) has modeled the kind of life and ministry that reveals his wholehearted commitment to judging “success” on God’s terms.  (As an aside, listen to Mark Dever’s interview with Hughes here.)

Over the years, R. Kent Hughes’ writings have been a staple for me.  His Disciplines of a Godly Man is a frankly overwhelming call for men to be men of God, and his commentaries are, bar none, the best homiletical commentaries I think I’ve ever seen.  His work is God-honoring and church-edifying and I daresay there are few voices out there today as steady as his.

Let me also digress a bit and give a nod to Hughes’ writing style as well.  He seems to have the right balance between being accessible but not being shallow, betwen holding the reader’s interest without trying to entertain, and between being confessional without being inappropriately so.  Those who read often know that some authors just click with them where they are.  Hughes clicks with me and I never read his work without profiting.

This book should, I believe, be put in the hands of every beginning seminary student as well as every seasoned pastor.  It is amazing how subtly (and not-so-subtly) “career-istic” evangelical ministry has become.  The assumptions that one should “climb the ladder” and that success is found in doing so effectively are all around us.  I daresay these mindsets are in the very ecclesiastical air we breathe.

What the book revealed to me was that even those of us who have convinced ourselves that we are principled churchmen for whom the size of the church isn’t key and for whom the visibiltiy and enviability of our positions isn’t even on our radar screen can, in fact, be drinking from this poison well at the same time we’re projecting this pious facade.  Everybody is principled until that bigger church comes along, aren’t they?  Everybody likes to convince themselves that they’re at peace leading, say, 30 people…until somebody else gets the church with 100 people (or whatever).

Hughes gives a very convicting story about spending some time with a pastor of a church of something like 30 people.  The guy lived in a small trailer with his family and pastored this small church.  Hughes made a comment to him along the lines of, “It must be tough for you guys.”  To which the young pastor asks why he would say such a thing when God had given him the amazing privelege of being able to shepherd thirty of his saints.

Put that kind of talk beside the fake, absurd, bravado of the loud-talking ministers at the Convention meetings and see how it compares.  Even more painful, put that kind of talk beside the secret desires of your own ministerial ambition and see how you feel.  I did, and I didn’t like what it revealed.

What would ministry be like if we could come to judge success in terms of faithfulness and obedienceinstead of numbers and so-called advancement?  I daresay it would revolutionize ministry.  (Speaking as a Southern Baptist, I know it would revolutionize much of ministry as we’ve come to define it.)

Bottom line:  if you are a minister in any capacity, you should click the link, buy this book, and drink deeply from this well.  I’m still trying to nurse the wounds from reading this thing, and I’ve never been happier to be so wounded.

 

James Leo Garrett, Jr.’s Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study

The appearance of Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study is a welcome occasion not only because it presents us with the seasoned offerings of arguably the greatest living Baptist historical theologian, but also because it appears at a time in Baptist history when myopic tangents and agendas seem increasingly to dominate our particular ecclesial landscape from various idiosyncratic corners. That is to say, voices like Dr. Garrett’s are needed in our day of confusion and denominational flux in which the very question of “What is a Baptist?” seems to be more unresolved than resolved.

This is not to suggest that Garrett has presented an argument in this work, or that he is pushing a point. Rather, he is telling a story, and he is wearing the cloak of the objective historical theologian in doing so. But he tells the story in such a balanced way, and with such painstaking documentation, that it cannot help but shed light on the various and sundry conversations and skirmishes one encounters here and there about what it means to be a Baptist Christian.
We need to hear the story again, particularly the story of the theological convictions of the people called “Baptists.” We need, in other words, this book.
It is, perhaps, an odd thing to say about a work of historical theology, but let me simply say that for this reader, this book was, strangely enough, an occasion for deep introspection about what it means to be Baptist Christian. The story Garrett tells creates context and context brings perspective. In this sense, the almost overwhelming amount of data presented in the book is fascinating not only for the events that it chronicles, but also for how these events might help us to see our own place in the Baptist story more clearly today.
It is not a perfect book. Readers will invariably find some sections more interesting than others, but I daresay that Dr. Garrett has achieved a measure of objectivity and clarity in this work that render none of the sections unprofitable for the reader.
To be sure, there are quibbles. Dr. Garrett is famously fond of footnotes (e.g., Paul F.M. Zahl rather fascinatingly chided Dr. Garrett with, “There are just too many footnotes,” in his response to Garrett’s essay in Perspectives on Church Government [Broadman & Holman, 2004, p.207]). Of course, a work like this is necessarily going to be well-documented, but there were sentences in which it seemed almost overly so. At the risk of self-contradiction, let me add that the footnotes were simultaneously one of the more fascinating aspects of this work. The reader will find here a massive bibliography of Baptist sources that will inevitably aid him in his own study.
And I do so wish that the book contained a “Subject Index” and not only an “Index of Persons.” I found myself time and again wanting to trace the Baptist approaches to this or that particular issue, and, in this respect, such an index would have been very helpful. I do suspect the “Subject Index” would have made this already pricey book even more expensive and this already heavy volume even more physically ponderous, but it would have been helpful nonetheless. But these are trifles, really, and the latter may have more to do with Mercer University Press than Dr. Garrett.
In truth, what Dr. Garrett has given us here is a treasure trove of well-documented, carefully structured, and clearly presented snapshots of Baptist life which, when put together, made this reader thankful, once again, to be a Baptist. Simultaneously, I was challenged to avoid the unfortunately all-too-prevalent pitfalls into which too many in our story have fallen over the years.
I daresay every pastor should own this book and read it. Furthermore, interested laypeople, and those who are not but should be, ought to be encouraged to consider immersing themselves in the four hundred year old story of Baptist theology that is capably told by Dr. James Leo Garrett, Jr. in ways that will challenge and inspire any who take up this profound work.

Calvin Miller’s Life is Mostly Edges

What can I say about Life Is Mostly Edges  It is vintage Calvin Miiller:  witty, insightful, funny, touching, and moving.  Ever since I read The Singer, I have appreciated Miller’s writing.  Life Is Mostly Edges, his memoir, takes its place among Miller’s better works.  It is not necessarily a book I will return to, but it is one that I do not regret reading, that I had trouble putting down, and that I very much want to loan to friends.

The account of Miller’s childhood is fascinating.  He grew up poor in Oklahoma, largely without a father (who left his mother when he was young).  But Calvin says he and his family never knew they were poor, primarily because of the indefatigable efforts of his mother.  In truth, this book constitutes one of the greatest eulogies to a mother I think I’ve ever read.  Even though I am a father, this fact challenged me to want to live my life in such a way that my daughter will remember me well.  On a side note, it was interesting to me how much space Calvin devoted to food, a not-too-surprising fact given the meager store of their small house growing up.

The account of his marriage to Barbara and their ministry together will certainly inspire any preacher who reads this book.  I was pained to read the account of some of the strife he went through as a pastor, and yet, that too is part of ministry.  Hearing a seasoned minister speak of such things on the other side of them is always helpful and it lends a measure of perspective to those of us in the pastorate.

He spends very little time on his Southwestern Seminary and Beeson days, which I found interesting, but he does pass on some helpful advice about teaching and the dynamics of delivering a lecture.

I met Dr. Miller at Southwestern seminary, and my wife and I housesat for him for a year while he and Barbara were in the Philippines.  It was during this time that our daughter, Hannah, was born, and I have always enjoyed telling her that her first night out of the hospital was spent in the home of Calvin and Barbara Miller.

Get this book.  It’s a great read!

Al Mohler’s Atheism Remix

Al Mohler has solidified his position as one of Evangelicalism’s most astute observers.  His Atheism Remix will do nothing but confirm that fact.  This fascinating book was originally a series of lectures delivered on the topic of atheism at Dallas Theological Seminary.  Crossway has done all of us a favor by putting it in print.

Only somebody with their head in the sand will be unable to see that the “New Atheism” is gaining momentum and converts, primarily because of the writings of Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, and Daniel Dennett.  Hitchens is likely the most media savvy of the “Four Horsemen of the New Atheist Apocalypse,” but Dawkins is the undeniable head of the movement.  With more-than-impressive book sales, it is indeed foolish to pretend that this is just a tempest in a teapot.  It is not, and I feel more and more that there are two issues that modern preachers had better pay attention to:  the new atheism and Islam.

Mohler’s book is a tight, cogent, careful summary of the four men and their respective arguments.  Mohler feels that these men are to be taken seriously, for while self-proclaimed atheists do remain but a small portion of the population, this movement is gaining momentum and having an impact.  Mohler highlights the difference between the new atheism and the old atheism by pointing to the evangelistic fervor of the new movement, as well as the fact that it lacks the kind of wistful sense of sorrow that some older atheists seem to have concerning the collapse of Christianity.  The new atheists want to dance on the grave of Christianity, and they feel that the quicker we can get to the funeral, the better.

After giving a summary of the men, their positions, and their major works, Mohler spends some time assessing and summarizing Alister McGrath’s response to Dawkins.  This was helpful, even though I do occasionally feel that Mohler laps too often into mere book reviews.  But that is, admittedly, a bit unfair:  Mohler is trying, I think, to use the major works in the argument as indicative of the greater issues at stake, and I believe he sees in McGrath’s response to Dawkins a good example of the major problem with a lot of these works:  that they are really just exercises in pop anti-theology that caricature in sad ways the Christianity they hate.  Furthermore, Mohler wants to make it clear that these men are fundamentalists in their naturalism-run-amuck, and that they themselves are guilty of the same shoddy thinking that they seem to think dominates all of Christian life today.

If you want a great summary of and a helpful proposal for how to respond to this troubling movement, this is definitely the place to start.

Wade Burleson’s Hardball Religion

Wade Burleson is an Oklahoma pastor and former Trustee of the International Mission Board whose blog and whose reporting thereon were at the center of controversy from 2005 to 2008 (and, in a sense, still are).  Particularly, Burleson alleged on his blog that some IMB Trustees were perpetrating ego-driven power plays that effectively squelched dissent of others on the board.  Burleson alleges that power on this board is centralized in the hands of the few who routinely hold secret meetings to conduct and dictate IMB business in violation of IMB rules.  Furthemore, he alleges that a high-profile SBC figure who is at the head of another SBC entity is effectively trying to have his way with the IMB Board of Trustees, whose leadership, he argues, are in this high profile person’s back pocket.  He further alleges that those in leadership of the IMB BOT consistently harrass Jerry Rankin and seek to have him ousted and do the same with other IMB personnel.  And, finally, Burleson adamantly insists that the prohibition of “private prayer language” among missionary candidates by IMB Trustees as well as the landmark position that missionary candidates must have been immersed in SBC churches for their baptism to be considered valid have effectively elevated secondary and tertiary doctrinal matters to first-order matters, which, Burleson contends, is the hallmark of fundamentalism and Landmarkism.

Whew!

That, in a nutshell, is what Burleson began blowing the whistle on when he became a member of the IMB BOT.  He did so on his blog, which seems to be the main complaint (among others) against Burleson by his detractors, and even continued to do so after a policy was passed forbidding the public airing of grievances by IMB Trustees.

So, after an unsuccessful attempt to censure Burleson a couple of years ago (squelched by the mediating influence of Convention leadership who, to hear Burleson tell it, slapped the hands of over-reaching, power-hungry IMB Trustee leaders), the Board finally succeeded in censuring Burleson who consequently resigned so as not to be a distraction to the work of missions in the SBC.

A book like this raises a whole host of ethical questions.  First of all, there’s the question of the ethics of writing a book like this in the first place.  Is it right to do so?  Similar questions were asked about Joel Gregory’s book from some years back.

On the one hand, I would argue that denominational abuses should indeed be made known to the people who comprise the Southern Baptist Convention.  Woe be to us if we allow the leaders of various entities to operate in the dark outside of the eyes of the very people they are to be working for.  And so, in a fundamental sense, no, a book like this is not inherently unethical.  I might make the case that covering over abuses is what is unethical.

On the other hand, parts of Burleson’s account troubled me.  For instance,consider the very odd story of the IMB Trustee ominously brandishing a knife when Burleson busted up one of their caucuses in a hotel lobby (he takes a knife out of his pocket, Burleson comments on it, then the guy goes on to clean his teeth with it or something like that).  Now, this was a highly inappropriate thing for the Trustee to do, and he apparently realizes this because Burleson tells us that he later apologized for it.  But here’s the rub:  he apologized to Burleson for doing it…then Burleson includes the story in a published work.

I am sympathetic to Burleson’s overall efforts, but, for some reason, this bothered me.  You do not dig up the sins of others after they have apologized for them and broadcast them to the world.  It appears that there are more than enough genuine abuses in the IMB BOT that have not been apologized for, much less remedied, to provide Burleson with enough material for a book.

Furthermore, I’m still chewing on the fact that Burleson continued to blog about his concerns after the BOT passed a rule about Trustees publicly criticizing board actions.  This, as I understand it, is what earned him a censure, regardless of the undeniable motives of those who simply wanted a censure to shut him up.

What is more, I must confess to some irritation at hearing yet another Southern Baptist claim the mantle of Luther:  “Here I stand.”  I don’t deny that Burleson is seeking reform, and that he’s shown courage in doing so, but can somebody please bring a resolution to the floor banning all SBC efforts to co-opt Luther’s famous statement?  (I know that Burleson does not think he’s Luther, but this phrase really should be retired unless somebody other than the modern “reformer” wants to apply Luther imagery, say, 150 years from now.)

Now for the bigger ethical issue:  the ethics of what is actually happening in the SBC.  Wade Burleson, in my opinion, is to be commended for doggedly insisting that the IMB BOT follow the rules.  He is to be commended for pointing out what is to me the most alarming revelation of the book:  that the head of one SBC entity is trying to undermine the leadership and position of another SBC entity head.  This, to me, is inexcusable, and I am glad that Burleson has put it in print.  Furthermore, I am glad that Burleson blows the whistle on the encroaching Landmarkism that is undeniably present in the SBC.  And, finally, I think that Burleson has defined “fundamentalism” precisely.

A fascinating, if troubling, read, that I hope will find a wide readership.

Baptist Theology with Dr. James Leo Garrett, Jr.

The following interview with Dr. Garrett took place on March 2, 2009.  The occasion for the interview was the publication of his Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study in January of 2009.

 

Dr. James Leo Garrett, Jr. has been a Baptist theological educator for over fifty years.  He has taught primarily in three Baptist institutions: Southwestern Seminary, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and Baylor University.  He was at Southwestern Seminary from 1949 to 1959 and from 1979 to 1997 with post-retirement teaching until 2003. 

We really do appreciate you taking the time to speak with us today, Dr. Garrett.

Thank you, sir.

Dr. Garrett, I hope you will indulge me for just a moment.  I wanted to share just a brief word of appreciation for you as a former student, if that is ok.  I thought I might do so by sharing just a small paragraph from Paul Basden’s chapter on you in the 2001 edition of Theologians of the Baptist Tradition (Broadman & Holman).  Paul Basden wrote this:

“For five decades now James Leo Garrett, Jr. has taught and written about Baptist theology.  Given the size of the schools which he has served, one can only begin to estimate the number of students whom he has influenced to think biblically, historically, and theologically about the Christian faith.  Who knows how many young seminarians had their minds broadened in his introductory theology courses or received flashes of inspiration in his famous ‘after-lecture’ discussions, or first encountered the mystery of the Trinity in his beloved patristics elective, or learned to grapple with Luther or Augustine in one of his doctoral seminars?  Who knows how many times he invited classes into his home for a meal or recommended former students for church positions or faculty appointments or counseled confused young ministers about their calling or career?  He has had an enormous influence on Southern Baptists during the past half century.  Beloved by students and fellow professors alike, Garrett is recognized by many of his peers as the most knowledgeable Baptist theologian living today.” (p.298)

Dr. Garrett, I just wanted to say here at the beginning that I share in those words of Paul Basden and just want to thank you here at the outset for your life, your ministry, and your work.  As a former student, I owe you a great debt of gratitude as do so many others.  So, thank you very much.

Well, Pastor Wyman, those words, I am sure, are vastly exaggerated, but I am grateful to have had you as one of my students.  Thank you very much.

The occasion of this interview is the publication in January of this year, two months ago, of Dr. Garrett’s new book, Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study, which was published by Mercer University Press.  I have only recently finished reading the book and it is a kind of education in and of itself.  So let me begin, Dr. Garrett, by asking this question:  “Why this book?”

Well, Pastor Wyman, I will answer it in two ways.

First of all, I will give a more personal answer.  In 1950, when I was a very young instructor at Southwestern Seminary, the faculty allowed me to introduce a new elective course in the curriculum called “The History of Baptist Theology.”  I taught that course at Southwestern during the 50’s and again, later, in the 80’s and 90’s and at Southern Seminary during the 60’s and early 1970’s.  That course involved having students write papers on many subjects.  Then, after my 2nd retirement from teaching in 2003, I began an intensive reading of all of these sources and a research project which eventuated in this book.

Now, why this book?  No book of this kind, of this nature and scope, on this subject, had ever been written in the history of the Baptists so far as I knew.  I did not know when I started that William Brackney would write A Genetic History of Baptist Thought and that it would be published in 2004.  I did not know that when I began my book and I’m sure he did not know, when he was writing his, that I would be writing mine.

So these are the only two books that have attempted to cover comprehensively Baptist confessions of faith, Baptist theologians, and theological movements and controversies.  There have been books on each of those three areas, many books, but only these two on the whole field.

It is a massive book, well over 720 pages of text, not including the index of names, and I imagine when you sit down to begin to write a Baptist theology covering four hundred years that you have really got to think through your methodology and your approach.  What was your methodology in writing this book?

As I just said, it sought to cover in an integrated, not a segregated, interpretation, the major confessions of faith adopted by Baptists, the major theologians among the Baptists, and the major theological movements and controversies that have affected Baptist life.

Now, I tried to do this by using both what we call “primary sources” and “secondary sources,” that is, the original writings of the people we are discussing and then what’s been written about them.  Take two examples:  one is John Gill, back in the 17th century, the other, E.Y. Mullins, at the beginning of the 20th century.  Both of those were very influential Baptist theologians and it’s important to read, study, and interpret their own writings.  But because of their importance, there have been many things written about them, both favorable and unfavorable, both positive and negative.  So it is important to look at those assessments as well as what I would say in interpreting these.

Then we tried to let the authors speak for themselves before I attempted to make any assessment of their work.  Then, too, I operated on the basis of a five-continent or a six-continent view of Baptist history.  It depends on whether you include Australia and New Zealand in Asia as to whether you have five or six continents.  When I was a very young seminary student, I bought Latourette’s seven-volume History of the Expansion of Christianity, which was the first comprehensive missionary history of the world from a Christian viewpoint.  It greatly influenced my life.  Then, working with the Baptist World Alliance, as I have since 1965, I was intent on having a book that would include more than Britain and North America.  Dr. Brackney confines his work to Britain and North America, and Dr. McBeth, in his history of the Baptist movement, included North America, Britain, and continental Europe, but not the other continents of the world.

So that’s what I would say about methodology.

It is an interesting look at Baptist theology over the last four hundred years, and I am just curious to know why the world would need such a book on Baptists appearing in January of 2009?  Why Baptists in 2009?

We need the book, first of all, because we haven’t had this kind of thing before.  Dr. Brackney and I have, in that sense, been breaking new ground.  We needed an overview.  We need to rise above the particulars.  Some people would understand the 17th century and some might understand the 19th century, but we need a view of Baptist theology that is comprehensive.  That is why the effort was made.

Now, Baptists need that for their own self-understanding.  This is a great need today in our churches:  that people understand what the Baptist identity is.  What are the distinctives and what are the beliefs that Baptists share with other Christians?  So there was a need for the book for Baptists and, then, for others to know what theology Baptists have had.

At one time there were people saying we did not have any Baptist theology.  Theology was only written by Roman Catholics or Lutherans or Anglicans or Presbyterians or somebody else.  But this book is, I think, quite clear evidence that that is not true.  So, the Baptist movement with its distinctives- -its religious freedom, separation of church and state, the supremacy of Scripture over tradition without rejecting all tradition,  the tendency to want to go back to the New Testament to recover apostolic or primitive Christianity,  the baptism of believers only by immersion and, with that, the goal of a regenerate church membership, the priesthood of all believers, congregational polity, and a strong emphasis on evangelism and missions; these are some of the things that are important for Baptists.  Sometimes these distinctives have been taken by other groups.  They are not altogether distinctive of Baptists today, but the mix of these distinctives is what has made the Baptist movement distinctive.

You mentioned regenerate church membership, and you have written on regenerate church membership.  I know of at least one article you have written specifically devoted to the issue of regenerate church membership and, of course, you have published on the issue of church discipline as well.  Let me just ask you about your thoughts concerning the recent discussions that have taken place in the Southern Baptist Convention annual meetings concerning an effort to see a resolution passed, that was ultimately passed last year, to call churches back to a regenerate church membership.  Do you think this is a favorable development?

Yes, I do.  I think that the Convention cannot mandate that, of course, because that is a decision that the local churches have to make, but to advise and counsel and encourage is certainly in order.  I am very grateful for the good work that you have done in the field of church discipline.  I think what you have written is the most practical set of helps that we have out there, available today, to help existing churches recover some sense of church discipline and positive discipleship.

So, yes, I think the regenerate church membership goal is a worthy one and it means, of course, that in the last century or so, many Baptist churches have been very loose in terms of their membership rolls and this is what they are trying to address today.  It is at the front end, in terms of members being received, and then it is a continual problem of authentic membership in the years that follow.

Let me ask you to generalize just a little bit.  You are a historical theologian, and you cover, obviously, a very long period of time, four hundred years, in your study of Baptist theology and much longer, of course, in your two-volume Systematic Theology.  But I am curious to know, as you look at four hundred years of Baptist history, who you would see as the top three or four Baptist figures, from any time period, whose work, in your opinion, ought to be carefully studied by Baptist pastors and laypeople today?

Well, Pastor Wyman, I have a hard time limiting my answer to your requested three or four.  I tend to want to identify more.  Initially, in responding to you, I might be prone to say, “Oh, we have so many of the older works of Baptist theologians that are not in print.”  But then I have to reckon what the electronic revolution has done.  I have been told, on good authority, that almost all the works of Baptist theologians that are more than seventy-five years old are now available electronically.  And through Google search, most of them are free, and there are other places where you have to pay for the text to be produced.  So the availability will not be a big issue in my answer.

I would say, if we’re going back to the 17th century, that John Bunyan is the one who, above all, should be read.  Not because he is necessarily right on all points, but here was a man who, with limited formal education, but with a passion for God and for the Bible, was able in rather remarkable literary form to write on many theological themes, not only in his famous Pilgrim’s Progress.  We have today a wonderful thirteen-volume edition from Oxford if you want to buy the whole thing, but I believe you can get it free electronically.  So I would say, from that early century, John Bunyan.

From the next century, I would take John Gill and Andrew Fuller, especially Andrew Fuller.  His works have been republished in recent years.  He was a very practical theologian, a pastor.

From the 19th century, I might want to mention John L. Dagg, whose work is in print.  He was a Southern theologian.  Then the sermons of Charles Haddon Spurgeon are still filled with theological content and can be read widely because they were preached from a pulpit in Spurgeon’s day.

In the 20th century, I would speak of people like Carl Henry, Bernard Ramm and Millard Erickson.  Most of these works are still in print.

And then, of course, in my book I have a group of baby boom theologians that certainly have works in print.  So I’ve given you a broader answer, but these are some of the ones that I think would be worthy of attention.  Now, that is not to say there are not others.

This may overlap a little bit, but let me ask you more personally, for yourself, who the Baptist figures are who have had the greatest impact on your own thinking and work?  Let me put it another way:  do you have favorite Baptist authors that you return to time and time again?

Pastor Wyman, as you may know, I was a student of W.T. Conner, the theologian at Southwestern for thirty-nine years, and my own teacher during the last days of his teaching career.  When I began as a young teacher, of course, he had shaped my own thinking.  I had read his works.  I wrote my dissertation on his theology.  So it would be important for me to list him as the number one influence in the early formation of my own theology.

In the 1950’s we did not have many evangelical theologians writing at that time.  Non-Baptists like Emil Brunner, for example, were greatly helpful to me as I struggled with the teaching of theology.

But then we had to deal with Landmarkism, which was alive and well at that time in Baptist life, still exerting quite an influence.  So I had to read J.R. Graves even though I didn’t always agree with Graves.  I had to interact with him.

And later on, as I began to be more mature in my theology, I had to rely on people like A.H. Strong as well.  Then I was colleague to Dale Moody at Southern Seminary, and nobody who lives with Dale Moody could be unaffected by Dale Moody.  And then, of course, Carl Henry was very active.  When I came to write my own theology, beginning at the age of 63, I had to deal with Millard Erickson, who had already written his Christian Theology.

So these were some of the people who were very formative.  Now, I read others.  I read P.T. Forsyth.  I read E. Y. Mullins.   I read Luther.  I read Augustine. I read Calvin. I read Schleiermacher.  I taught Augustine, Luther, and Calvin, in seminars. But for Baptist theologians, these would be the first.  And then I would say, as far as biblical theologians, I think I was more greatly influenced by H.H. Rowley, as an Old Testament theologian.  In the New Testament field, Ray Summers, my teacher, was very influential on my views of last things, or the doctrine of eschatology.

This is likewise a bit of a personal question, along the same lines, but I am just curious about your own reading habits.  Do you read daily, every day?

I usually read something, yes, every day.  There will be days I do not because of schedule.  Right now I am reading the festschrift honoring my colleague Leon McBeth, which was published late last year, called Turning Points in Baptist History.  I am reading that and will be finishing that shortly.  That is a book that has theological as well as historical significance.

I know you are retired, but do you have any other writing projects in the wings?

I cannot answer that with a clear affirmative.  For some years, Dr. Malcolm Yarnell and I have contemplated co-editing a history of the doctrine of the priesthood of all Christians.  I do not know if we will ever get that done.  He has done considerable writing on the Reformation period, and I have done some writing on the patristic period.  If we can ever get the medieval and modern sections done, we may be able to have a book.  There is no comprehensive, good, reliable history of that doctrine.  But Yarnell has other priorities, and I am not as well as I used to be; so we do not promise anything in that area.

There might be some things I wish I had done in the past.

Well, that raises another question:  are there any books that you have not been able to write that you wish you would have written?  I guess, perhaps, that would be one, to this point, that you would like to see done.

There are two others I will mention.  When I was at Southern Seminary, I gave an inaugural address on the methodology for the history of Christian doctrine, or historical theology, in which address I proposed that the best way to do this today would be to have an international, interdenominational team of scholars to do a comprehensive history of Christian doctrine.  No sooner had I given that address and it was published in the journal Review & Expositor that I received a letter from Dr. Jaroslav Pelikan at Yale University telling me that he was launching a big five-volume history of Christian doctrine and, by implication, he was saying that my project was not needed.  My later move to Baylor with different duties meant that I was not teaching the history of Christian doctrine for a while.  After coming back to Southwestern and resuming that teaching in 1980, although I gave some serious consideration to doing something myself, I gave up the project because there is so little market out there since most seminaries require systematic theology but not  historical theology.  So I did not attempt that big project which I originally had proposed as a massive cooperative effort.

As for the other, for many years I taught a course at Southwestern on the theology of the American cults.  We treated Mormonism, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Christian Science, the Unification Church, the Ba’hai World Faith, and various other movements that have been deviations from either Christianity, Judaism, or Islam.  I, at one time, contemplated a textbook in that area.  But, you know, each one of those religious movements is a field of specialization itself.  You can be very good on the Mormons and you may be much less competent on Jehovah’s Witnesses at the same time.  One needs to be competent on all of these in order to  write a first-rate text, I felt that I never got to the point where I could do that like I wanted to do it.  So I retired, after many years of teaching, without producing a book in that area.  We still do not have a very good textbook in that field after all of these years.

Let me go back for just a minute to this letter you received from Jaroslav Pelikan.  I know he passed away just a couple of years ago.  Is that customary scholarly habit to receive a letter saying that your proposed writings are not necessary because it is being done?

I do not think the letter was quite that specific.  I think it was more of an indirect statement.  I must say, of course, I have never received another letter like that.  I did not feel any resentment about it at the time.  My wife seems to remember the incident more than I do.  I do not know how common that is, because I never experienced it in any other setting.  But evidently he was wanting to be a little protective of his own interests.  He produced a very important five-volume set, which is very topical rather than chronological.  Therefore, it was not the method that I used in teaching.  Mine was more chronological than topical.  So I never did use his book in my classes, but certainly I have used the volumes.  They are a very important contribution to the literature.  There was never any ill-will between Dr. Pelikan and me.

Dr. Garrett, I really do appreciate, and I know that readers of this interview will appreciate, your taking the time to answer some questions and, God willing, if you will   allow it, when the next book comes out, we will talk again.

Well, let me say in closing, Pastor Wyman, that I appreciate talking with you and having these questions from you.   I would like to say to you as pastor of your congregation there in Dawson, GA, and other church people who should read or ponder these words, that I think one of our greatest challenges today is in the local Baptist church: to recover a sense of Baptist identity, to teach our heritage, to share with our people our stories, our heroes, our heroines, our triumphs and our tragedies, and to make being a Baptist Christian a much clearer and more responsible thing in today’s world.  I believe every local Baptist church has that challenge today, and I know if anybody can meet that challenge, you can do it there in Dawson, GA.

I appreciate that so much.  Thank you so much.  Let me just encourage, in closing, readers of this interview to consider purchasing Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study.  It is a great resource and would be a great help in the teaching of our distinctives and our identity and heritage in the local church, wherever you are.  I encourage all of you to get this book.

Thabiti Anyabwile’s What is a Healthy Church Member?

Thabiti Anyabwile has written a wonderful and helpful little IX Marks book that should be placed in the hands of every church member, and, God willing, will be placed in the hands of the members of First Baptist Church, Dawson (i.e., we’ll be doing home groups through this book soon).  A companion work to Mark Dever’s Nine Marks Of A Healthy Church and What Is A Healthy Church?What Is A Healthy Church Member?discusses ten marks (adding one, prayer, to Dever’s original nine).  They all begin with “A Healthy Church Member Is…”, and conclude:

1. an expositional listener

2. a biblical theologian

3. gospel saturated

4. genuinely converted

5. a biblical evangelist

6. a committed member

7. seeks discipline

8. a growing disciple

9. a humble follower

10. a prayer warrior

The discussion of each is succinct, accessible, brief without being shallow, and practical without being “gimmicky.”  I particularly like his discussion of expositional listening, and kept thinking how careful attention to such a concept would revolutionize worship as we know it.  Numbers 4 and 5 provide some very helpful discussion of the need to share the whole story of the gospel when we share it.  I think Anyabwile has offered a real corrective here for the type of evangelism that attempts to tell the “good news” without sharing first the “bad news” that makes the “good news” good!

Each of the chapters is helpful and commendable.  This would be a tremendous resource to work into a new member orientation class or to take your church through in small groups.

IX Marks is to be commended for producing these wonderful tools.

Check this book out.

Dallas Willard’s The Great Omission

Dallas Willard’s The Great Omission is vintage Willard.  By that I mean that he here explores the same topics he explores in his other books:  discipleship, the disappearance of the idea and possibility of discipleship from modern Christian practice (thus, the title of this book), the disciplines, and Lordship salvation.  It is safe to say that Willard essentially writes the same book every times he writes a book.  Now, that sounds like a real criticism and possibly a slight, so let me clarify:  I am absolutely thrilled that Willard keeps writing the same book!  Indeed, I hope he does 20 more.

Why?  Because nobody is saying what Willard is saying in the convincing and powerful way in which he is saying it.  Furthermore, Willard has his hand on the great tragedy of modern Evangelicalism:  the disappearance of discipleship.  Thirdly, while he writes the same book in terms of focus and thesis, the wonder is in the nuances and shades he brings.  So his books really do form a kind of prism of discipleship which shimmer, shine, reflect, and refract as you turn them this way and that, and, as such, they form a wonderful whole.

I was first introduced to Dallas Willard sixteen years ago when the pastor of the church I was serving as a Minister of Youth gave me The Spirit of the Disciplines.  It absolutely rocked my world.  The Divine Conspiracydid the same, though I found parts of it troubling.  And now The Great Omission has threatened to top them all.  But not really, because these books need one another and I need all of them.

This book is actually a collection of various articles, lectures, and reviews on discipleship and the disciplines that Willard has written or delivered over the years.  They are occasional pieces, but they flow very well together in this book.

Willard repeats the following a half-dozen times in this book:  Grace is opposed to earning, not to effort.

That’s a profound and simple way of putting a truth that we desperately need to get straight today.  Grace does not mean that we do not construct a deliberate, intentional, and solid plan for becoming more like Christ.  At the heart of this plan lie the disciplines that Willard summarize here but has spoken of in greater length elsewhere.

The absence of such concrete plans for conformity to Christ, as well as the absence of any apparent need to construct such a plan leads Willard to a shocking conclusion:  grace as we currently have defined it actually works against us being conformed into the image of Christ.

I agree.  It does.  This is evident and beyond dispute.

Willard is essentially seeking to strike a blow at the odd and gnosticized form of Christianity that fuels much of revivalistic Evangelicalism.  He is seeking to undermine that weird notion that one may have Christ as Savior but not Lord.  It is a blow that needs to be delivered, and Willard does so here with aplomb, clarity, and charity.

Trust me:  this is a book you will be glad you read.