An accidental blog

"If God is sovereign, then his lordship must extend over all of life, and it cannot be restricted to the walls of the church or within the Christian orbit." Abraham Kuyper Common Grace 1.1.

Sunday, 24 January 2021

New Resource Helps Christians Story-tell Their Faith

 

Mark Roques has been busy working on a new course to help Christians to become confident evangelists - some details below





Author, teacher and working philosopher Mark Roques has developed an accessible online course to help Christians disciple others using creative storytelling.  Slave Chronicles and Dangerous Beliefs offers twenty short stories plus study material on the theme of historic and modern slavery. The material can be used in everyday conversations, religious education or talks.  


Each Chronicle contrasts Christian and materialist worldviews and demonstrates how to have  respectful conversations while telling a story. While most people wouldn’t confess to supporting slavery, many acquiesce to its ongoing evils through complacency or ignorance. Alongside each narrative the evils of slavery are shown to have their roots in wrong thinking about the value of all human beings.


Commissioned by Thinking Faith Network, this short course which launches online February 2021, demonstrates how to discuss a biblical response which challenges this social evil. It can be studied by individuals, student or other small groups working at their own pace over six-eight weeks and supported by an online peer-learning community. 


Mark first developed a worldview approach as an RE high school teacher in 1990s to attract the attention of dIsengaged sixth-formers:

 “I immediately saw that neither pious homilies or straightforward religious education were cutting it. Instead I brought in albums, video and newspaper clips. What story was Madonna inhabiting in Material Girl, or Roy Keane telling when he wrote that pro-footballers were just ‘pieces of meat’? By exploring the stories behind pop music, entertainment and sports reporting with them I was able to unpack the underlying worldview. 


I named and shamed the individualistic and materialist belief system that mugs so many today. Only by understanding this dark faith can we make sense of human trafficking. I pointed out that trafficked people are not just ‘pieces of meat’ for sexual consumption or slave labour, but precious creatures made in God’s image and likeness.The students hung on my every word. No sneering and smirking and excellent end-of-term feedback. Not only does this approach work, it works in every setting without any complaints of preaching or indoctrination. Vital in today’s pluralist society. You are sharing about something people know very little of through stories. Materialism is almost never scrutinised as a dangerous and destructive belief system . Many today ignore the Christian faith because they have never thought about the materialist mindset that has captivated their lives and imaginations.”


Talking about Mark’s method, the Right Reverend Dr John B Thomson, Bishop of Selby, said:

“This is a very impressive approach to evangelism. I like the way you deconstruct the assumed beliefs people rarely examine. I keep saying wherever I go that I have yet to meet a non-religious person in my life. Everyone has beliefs. The question I’m interested in is which religion or beliefs really hold water when faced with the big meaning questions of life? Your resources address this head on.” 

Co-developer Patricia Gray said: “Mark has a great track record of holding neighbours, audiences and readers enthralled. His lively and humorous storytelling has captivated thousands over the years. Yet all the while, he’s dealing with some of the most difficult and fundamental aspects of what and why people believe as they do. With Slave Chronicles and Dangerous Beliefs Mark brings a much-needed and useful online resource to the Christian community, educating and enabling both discipleship and evangelism at a time when meeting physically is still challenging for many.”

Monday, 4 January 2021

Findings: A Journal of Reformational Thought


 Findings: A Journal of Reformational Thought


It is available free from Thumbwidth Press.


This initial journal issue is also a Festschrift - a collection of articles by a number of reformational thinkers from around the world, dedicated to Bruce Wearne on the occasion of his 70th birthday.

Articles include an essay by Bruce himself: "The Revival of Christian Scholarship" selected by the editors as a fine example of Bruce's work over the years.

The other articles are:


  • Robert Wolfgramm – The Bruce I Know
  • Keith Sewell – Calvinism, NeoCalvinism and the Reformational Movement
  • Roy Clouser – Romans and Genesis: An Exploratory Essay
  • Jim Skillen – Modernity and the Secular
  • Chris Gousmett – The Place of Robots in Human Social Life
  • Alida Sewell – Fatherhood in Scripture and in Jane Austen's Novels
  • Alan Cameron – Jurology and the Concreteness of Law: A Reformational Jurisprudential Perspective


We hope to publish Findings at least twice a year. Please contact the editors (Chris Gousmett and Alan Cameron) to submit an article for consideration.

While visiting the Thumbwidth Press shop, check out the other titles available for sale, or free.

Friday, 1 January 2021

Some new(ish) Reformational books

 




Mike Wagenman The Power of the Church: The Sacramental Ecclesiology of Abraham Kuyper


Mike Wagenman's new book on Kuyper's ecclesiology has been published. Full details here.

I was honoured to be asked to write a blurb for the book - this is what I wrote:

“What hope is there for the church? What has the church to do with power and what has power to do with the church? These are the important questions Wagenman raises in this important and engaging work. By drawing on and developing the inchoate insights of the Dutch polymath, Abraham Kuyper, Wagenman address these key issues of church and power—issues that are perhaps more relevant today than they were when Kuyper was writing in the nineteenth century. Kuyper had a multi-aspectual view of power and Wagenman takes Kuyper’s seminal views and produces a much needed critique of power in the church today. With this book, Wagenman establishes his position as one of the leading Kuyper scholars. If you are interested in Kuyper, ecclesiology, or power—then get the book!”