晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023

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The Good Book Blog, a resource from the faculty of Talbot School of Theology, features articles that explore contemporary ideas from the perspective of the Bible the Good Book including topics such as apologetics, biblical studies, theology, philosophy, spiritual formation, ministry and leadership. Find out more about what sets Talbot apart and how it prepares Christian leaders through its degree programs.

 

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  • The Good Book Blog — 

    Talbot faculty members share some of their picks for the best books released in 2012. Read about their recommendedations here, listed in alphabetical order:

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    What are spiritual gifts, really? Andrew Faris posted an interview with me on this question at the "Christians in Context" blog.

  • Joanne Jung — 

    Hell. I don't think about this subject often, so you can imagine my surprise when I found such moving thoughts on hell from an author I regard: John Bunyan.

  • Rob Lister — 

    As we near the outset of a new academic semester, I thought this comment from John Frame was a fitting word of encouragement for Talbot faculty and students alike concerning the nature of our engagement with Gods word.

  • Ben Shin — 

    I am very excited to announce that Talbot School of Theology will be launching a new Doctor of Ministry track in Asian-American Ministry in June of 2013. This is a 2-week residency that will run from June 3rd to the 14th, 2013. This track will be taught and guided by some of the most experienced leaders, instructors, and practitioners in Asian-American ministry. The track is geared towards anyone who pastors or leads Asian-Americans in a church or parachurch.

  • Jason McMartin — 

    Among the must-have toys of Christmas 1975 was the pet rock. Advertising executive Gary Dahl conceived the idea while listening to others complain about the hassles of animate pets, and then his marketing instincts kicked in. He gathered ordinary stones,

  • Barry Corey — 

    Oh! Little town of Newtown, how still and sad we see thee lie. Newtown. About 100 miles from the little town where I grew up. That Connecticut bedroom village where local industries long manufactured fire hoses and folding boxes. The town where the game Scrabble began. The bucolic community where pizza places are called Carminuccios and elementary schools are called Sandy Hook. The New England hamlet where names of streets describe its pastoral landscape, names like Head of Meadows, Boggs Hill and Deep Brook.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    Al mundo paz naci坦 Jes炭s es el inicio de un popular villancico navide単o que resume magistralmente esta temporada de fiesta por la llegada del Hijo de Dios entre nosotros. La navidad celebra el cumplimiento de la promesa de la venida del Pr鱈ncipe de paz (Is. 9:6). La segunda persona de la trinidad se hizo hombre y habit坦 entre nosotros para despu辿s darnos vida a trav辿s de su sacrificio expiatorio en la cruz. Por lo tanto, la navidad es un acontecimiento digno de celebrarse.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    Heres a great electronic resource that you can use to introduce people to Jesus during this Christmas season.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    Con Campbells new book, Paul and Union with Christ: An Exegetical and Theological Study (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2012, 479 pages, $34.99 softcover) is one of the most important books Ive read in a long time. I predict that scholars and serious students of the Bible will be referring to this book for years to come. The reason is simple: Campbell has meticulously and even-handedly taken one of the Apostle Pauls central themes, union with Christ, and has painstakingly examined it both through an exegetical and a theological lens.

  • Rob Lister — 

    Crossway has just released a book I wrote on the doctrine of divine impassibility. The title is God is Impassible and Impassioned: Toward a Theology of Divine Emotion.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    Bueno, pero Dios sigue estando en su trono es una frase que he escuchado bastante veces en los 炭ltimos d鱈as. Los que la pronuncian generalmente lo hacen con un tono de resignaci坦n al ver que las cosas no se han dado como inicialmente esperaban. Me da la impresi坦n que recuerdan que Dios est叩 en control de las circunstancias solamente como un premio de consolaci坦n al ver que su candidato perdi坦 las elecciones o enfrentan otras decepciones en la vida. Tristemente en estos casos, estas personas se olvidan que nuestro Dios siempre es victorioso, siempre est叩 en control y que nada ni nadie obstruye su soberan鱈a sobre todo. Dios no deber鱈a ser el premio de consolaci坦n de los perdedores sino el premio mayor de todos los d鱈as sin importar lo que est辿 sucediendo a nuestro alrededor.

  • Mickey Klink III — 

    Are you studying Greek and need to be reminded that it is worth all the work? Or have you spent the time learning the basics of the Greek language and want to being to learn how to apply it to Scripture? There is a new book that nicely combines the study of New Testament Greek and a devotional reading of the Bible.

  • Erik Thoennes — 

    The recent statistics released by The Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life showing a decline among Americans who consider themselves religious are sure to alarm many concerned about the spiritual state of the nation. For evangelicals, the most potentially jarring of these statistics shows that for the first time in its history the United States does not have a Protestant majority. The study found that about 20% of Americans say they have no religious affiliation, an increase from 15% in the last five years. The sobering reality in all this for evangelicals is that, although our churches continue to grow, our evangelistic effectiveness has significantly lagged behind the US population growth. This study is a clear challenge to evangelicals to live up to our name and proclaim the good news in a culture where we can no longer assume common theological foundations. Evangelical Christians have to learn to preach the gospel in a culture where we are no longer part of the Protestant majority. This is not necessarily a bad thing though. A few observations about the data shows that the picture is not as bleak as it may seem.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    El Esp鱈ritu Santo es esencial para la vida y ense単anza cristiana. De hecho, no creo exagerar al afirmar que sin la ayuda y poder del Esp鱈ritu Santo todos nuestros esfuerzos tanto para agradar a Dios como para ense単ar a otros a hacerlo carecen de sentido y, por lo tanto, los resultados son insignificantes. Desgraciadamente, en muchas ocasiones el Esp鱈ritu Santo es olvidado, minimizado o incluso relevado a solamente una teor鱈a teol坦gica que creemos porque se encuentra en la Biblia, pero que no tiene ninguna relevancia en nuestra vida diaria. De hecho, llegu辿 a escuchar a un profesor de un seminario afirmar que muchos cristianos de forma pr叩ctica creen que la santa trinidad est叩 compuesta por el Padre, el Hijo y las Santas Escrituras. De esta manera, la presencia del Esp鱈ritu Santo es totalmente olvidada.

  • Dave Keehn — 

    Mentoring may be a buzz-word in the business world, but the practice of developing another person for specific purposes of skill or leadership development has been around since the beginning of civilization. It is evident throughout Scripture especially in the ministries of Jesus and Paul. However, the integration of mentoring for ministry preparation within academic settings has built in problems. SO WHY BOTHER? For many reasons...

  • Gary Manning Jr — 

    The latest news on historical Jesus research can now be found in Popular Mechanics? Im used to perusing Popular Mechanics to see flying cars, homemade submarines, and ads for power tools. But Popular Mechanics published a reconstructed picture of Jesus (quite a while ago, but I just noticed it!). Ill show you the picture and explain it in just a bit. But first, I want you to see some of my favorite portraits of Jesus. My students have become accustomed to seeing these non-traditional pictures of Jesus decorating my powerpoint lecture notes. This picture of Jesus and the Samaritan Woman (from the Via Latina catacomb, ca. 340-350) was painted by a Roman, so Jesus and the woman both have Roman hairstyles and clothing. No beard on Jesus!

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    A few weeks ago I put up a post with the title: Something About the Book of Romans that will Really Help You Get It. (Click HERE to read it.) I rounded out that article with a list of questions from Romans to help people see the importance of the ethnic issues going on in the background of the letter to the Romans. Some people expressed surprise that there were so many questions in the book of Romansits not something that they had noticed before. Well, there are a whole lot more questions in Romans than the ones I listed. Questions are one of the ways Paul moves his argument forward. Do you want to see how many questions there are?

  • Gary Manning Jr — 

    This morning, I began teaching Greek sentence diagramming to my students in Introduction to Exegesis. Some students love diagramming, but probably more dread it, at least at first. I picked some sentences to diagram from John 1, mainly because the students had just translated this passage a few weeks ago. One sentence in particular, John 1:12-13, reveals that nerdy analytical approaches such as Greek diagramming can help understand passages of Scripture better. Heres the diagram (with a translation below for non-Greek readers) 畚凌旅 隆畚 畆了留硫凌僚 留畚僚, 畆隆虜竜僚 留畚凌畤 畆両凌溜留僚 劉虜僚留 慮竜凌畤 粒竜僚劉慮留旅, 凌畤 旅竜凌旅僚 竜畆囲 畚 畚僚凌亮留 留畚凌畤,

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    He tenido el privilegio de ser profesor por m叩s de veinte a単os. A los diecinueve a単os empec辿 a ense単ar espa単ol y otras materias en una secundaria publica en Guadalajara, M辿xico. Esta aventura que empez坦 como un simple trabajo se ha convertido en mi vocaci坦n y he tenido la oportunidad de ense単ar en varios pa鱈ses, instituciones y niveles acad辿micos que van de la secundaria hasta el doctorado. La tarea de un profesor es ardua y siempre hay muchas cosas que aprender. De hecho, actualmente ense単o en un programa doctoral que se enfoca principalmente en la tarea educativa y en los procesos de ense単anza-aprendizaje en diferentes contextos cristianos.

  • Gary Manning Jr — 

    Last week, I posted my initial take on the so-called "Gospel of Jesus' Wife." My first point was that it was "too early to tell" whether the manuscript was genuine. In the last twenty years, forgers have produced some amazingly convincing forgeries, so scholars have become cautious about all archeological finds.

  • Gary Manning Jr — 

    According to an article in the Washington Post, an ancient manuscript claiming that Jesus had a wife has just been discovered. Ill tackle this new discovery with some Q&A. What is this new find? Karen King, the Gnostic scholar who published the manuscript, has titled it the Gospel of Jesus Wife (see the scholarly article here). It is a very small fragment, only 12 partial lines, of an ancient Gnostic book. The fragment, written in Coptic, dates from the fourth century, but it is a copy of an older book, perhaps written in the late second century. According to the fragment, Jesus refers to my wife.

  • Kenneth Way — 

    Where is one place that you can go in Jerusalem to see possible remains of King Davids palace, Nehemiahs wall, Hezekiahs tunnel, the Pool of Siloam and royal tombs? That would be the City of David, which is the name given to the small spur of land that extends southward from the Temple Mount. I want to share with you five highlights from this small area.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    El que espera, desespera dice un refr叩n popular. Esperar algo no es satisfactorio para nadie y en ocasiones las salas de espera en oficinas y consultorios se convierten en salas de tortura para muchos que, como yo, son impacientes y perciben el tiempo de espera como un tiempo perdido. Esta creencia com炭n puede percibir a la esperanza como algo negativo y algo no muy deseado.

  • David Talley — 

    Many people are aware of the 10/40 window, but have you heard about the missional emphasis on the 4/14 window? Luis Bush and others are stirring the church to consider a stronger focus on this "window" in the days ahead.