The Scroll - December 3, 2014

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Volume 70, Number 6

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Campus Newspaper of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary • Fort Worth, Texas A LOOK INSIDE »

THE SCROLL

Panel discusses church and homosexuality pg 5 »

Platt summons Christians to frontlines of cultural battlefield By Alex Sibley | SWBTS

Newly elected President of the International Mission Board (IMB) David Platt spoke in chapel at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Nov. 5. Preaching from Genesis 1-3, Platt identified four biblical foundations with cultural implications for the church today. “Based upon biblical foundations clearly laid on the opening pages of history, I challenge you to engage in the battle on the front lines in our culture, from abortion to poverty; from slavery

to sexual immorality,” Platt said. “To refuse to pick and choose which battles you’re going to stand up and speak out on and which ones you’re going to stay silent on. “In our proclamation, let’s be complete. In our belief, let’s be consistent. In our leadership, let’s be clear. The word of Christ compels contrite, compassionate, courageous action on a multiplicity of cultural issues and to engage with the Gospel on battlefronts across our culture.”

Beginning with the biblical foundation that God creates people as a demonstration of his glory, Platt explained that such a foundation’s cultural implication is that Christians must fight against abortion. Citing statistics indicating that there are 130,000 abortions around the world every day, Platt said, “I do not believe it is an overstatement to call abortion a modern holocaust.” “And just as German Christians did not need to hide from the reality of what was happening in concentration camps,” Platt said, “we in this room must not hide from the reality of what is happening in abortion clinics all around our country and around the world. Why can’t we hide? Because abortion is a clear affront to God’s glory as our creator and an assault of his work in creation.” The second biblical foundation is that God designs people for the display of his Gospel, the implication being that Christians must f lee sexual immorality and defend sexual complementarity within marriage for the sake of the Gospel. “This is one of those areas in our day where the word of God comes up totally against the patterns of our culture,” Platt said, “and we’re forced to make Platt pg 2 »

Blaising honored with festschrift By Alex Sibley | SWBTS

METAXAS ‘EXCITED’ ABOUT COLLEGE’S VISION By Alex Sibley | SWBTS Eric Metaxas, cultural apologist and author of The New York Times No. 1 bestseller Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy, spoke at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary’s College Legacy Banquet, Nov. 17. Metaxas said he was encouraged to hear the vision for the College at Southwestern, which he concisely stated as “evangelistic zeal coupled with academic excellence.” “I want you to know that is a rare thing,” Metaxas told those attending the banquet. “It’s sad that it’s a rare thing; it’s very sad. But let’s focus on the positive: it’s not a rare thing here. It is happening Metaxas pg 2 »

PATTERSON, MOHLER DISCUSS SOTERIOLOGY, FUTURE OF THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION By Alex Sibley | SWBTS

During the 66th annual meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society (ETS) in San Diego, Calif., Nov. 19, Craig Blaising, executive vice president and provost of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, was honored by fellow ETS members with the surprise announcement of a festschrift written in his honor. The festschrift, titled Eschatology: Biblical, Historical and Practical Approaches; A Volume in Honor of Craig Alan Blaising, will be published by Kregel Academic and released next fall. More than two dozen scholars contributed to the work, including Southwestern President Paige Patterson, Dean of the School of Theology David Allen and Associate Vice President for Academic Administration Greg Smith. Jeffrey Bingham, associate dean of biblical and theological studies at Wheaton College, and Glenn Kreider, professor of theological studies at Dallas Theological Seminary, served as co-editors. The announcement, which followed an ETS session moderated by Blaising, was made in honor of Blaising’s 65th birthday. Prior to the announcement,

multiple colleagues spoke of Blaising as both a model Christian and scholar. “Dr. Blaising, in his ministry at Southwestern Seminary, is a man who has been both brilliant in his handling of the curriculum and a real joy to work with,” said Paige Patterson. “He has proven to be gentle and firm in every way. His marriage has been a splendid example for that of all of our students as well as his home. And his local church involvement has been such that all are aware of it. Dr. Blaising, very honestly, I couldn’t have done a thing without you.” Jeffrey Bingham, before announcing the Festschrift, explained Blaising’s contributions to the discipline of patristic studies as an evangelical patristic scholar. “With his studies in Aberdeen on the theological method of Athanasius of Alexandria, Craig Blaising became the blazer of the trail for evangelical patristic studies,” Bingham said. “In a very true way, the present state of patristic studies within American Evangelicalism owes its seed and its growth to this man. There are students of Craig’s of two generations now serving in some of

the finest evangelical, and beyond evangelical, institutions in North America.” President of Southern Seminary R. Albert Mohler Jr., who also contributed to the festschrift, said of Blaising, “He has helped to shape an entire generation in terms of understanding not only the urgency of Christian theology—in particular the eschatological message of Scripture—but also to see it in a whole new way and to understand it in a way that is even more faithful, even more consistent in terms of biblical theology, and even more effective in its preaching. Behind him you find a score of others who have been influenced by his writings and by his teaching. I have been all over the world, and I can tell you that in virtually every place I have been, there is the effect of his teaching.” Following the announcement, Blaising said he was very honored by the presentation. “A festschrift is one of the great honors a professor can have,” he said. “It’s an honor for former students and colleagues to do that, and so I am deeply appreciative of their work.”

Seminary presidents Paige Patterson and R. Albert Mohler Jr. participated in a Grindstone discussion at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Nov. 12, in which they spoke on such topics as the future of theological education, the shift of Christianity away from western culture, and the state of the local church. The evening began, however, with Patterson and Mohler, in reference to their debate on divine election at the Southern Baptist Convention in 2006, sharing their perspectives on their soteriological differences. “The funny part about the debate we had was that it displeased everybody,” said Patterson, president of Southwestern Seminary. “We had a debate over Calvinism; everybody wanted to come to the bloodletting, and they were miserably disappointed. We obviously disagreed on some things, [but] they forgot that the whole purpose of [the debate] was to show how two people who differ on an issue can actually live together in harmony and act like Christians.” Grindstone pg 3 »


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