Monday, February 23, 2009

Reading Update

(6) A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens

I really think it would be pointless to review this one.  I'll just say if you haven't read it, read it and if you have read it, read it again.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

On the Lookout for Scapegoats

"Seeing, therefore, that the flesh is continually on the alert for subterfuges, by which it imagines it can remove the the blame of its own wickedness from itself to some other quarter, we must diligently guard against this depraved procedure, and accordingly treat of the calamity of the human race in such a way as may cut off every evasion, and vindicate the justice of God against all who would impugn it."

- John Calvin, The Institutes, Vol. 1, Ch. 15.1

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Reading Update

(5) Easy Chairs, Hard Words: Conversations on the Liberty of God - Douglas Wilson

In this short and very readable book, Wilson answers some of the big questions surrounding the exhaustive sovereignty of God.  Wilson writes the book as a fictional dialogue between a young man who is struggling with some things he is reading in his Bible that seem to contradict the theology he has been taught while growing up in what can only be described as a thoroughly Arminian-leaning church and a man from across town who pastors the church known pejoratively as the Calvinist church.  The young man returns week after week seeking the counsel of the pastor on things like faith, election, perseverance, sovereignty, theodicy, and even the use of systematic theology.  

I found the book very easy to read, saturated with Scripture, and to the point.  I have been looking for a good overview/defense of the doctrines of grace and I think I've found it here.  Those who have studied these issues at length may not find a wealth of new material, but they will find the presentation refreshing.  And those who have only heard mischaracterizations of the doctrines will gain a fresh understanding.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Reading Update

(4) God of Promise: An Introduction to Covenant Theology - Michael Horton

It was not an easy read by any stretch of the imagination, but the struggle was well worth the time and effort.  Melanie and have been working through this one together and I think that we both benefited greatly from it.  

It is, as the title suggests, an introduction to covenant theology.  Horton starts by showing the history of covenants in the Near East and then works out a biblical understanding of covenant.  Melanie and I both found the final chapters, which were chapters that showed the practical outworking of a covenantal biblical worldview to be especially helpful.  In those final chapters Horton helps the reader to better understand baptism, the Lord's Supper, and the purpose and use of the Law.  The book is recommended. 

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Reading Update

(3) Economics in One Lesson  - Henry Hazlitt

I took an economics class in high school, but I doubt I was paying much attention and that was quite some time ago.  So I decided to read something on economics and this book was recommended.  The book's thesis is summed up in the first chapter when Hazlitt explains that, "The whole of economics can be reduced to a single lesson . . . The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate but at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups."

This is the message that Hazlitt sets out to prove true in his book.  Hazlitt is certainly a free-market economist.  He is opposed to nearly all government intervention into economic affairs and frowns on things like minimum wages, subsidies, and social security.  His argumentation is sound and convincing and his writing is easy to read.  He takes a look at many practical areas of economics and shows how the failure to heed his one stated lesson has caused much damage.

The book is a good introduction to economics and certainly gets one thinking about the potential long-term effects of certain government policies currently under consideration.