houtz.tv
7Mar/110

Top Ten Books That Have Influenced Me

(The top ten books that have influenced me the most by reading them in order of most influential to least influential.)

1. "Institutes of the Christian Religion" by John Calvin.

If you only read one book outside the bible in your entire life, this should be that book. This book has been the greatest influence upon me and is still the greatest influence. Many of the questions Calvin answers are particular to his own age, but the world is still coming to terms with the Reformation and the Summa Theologica of the Reformation is Calvin's Institutes. One note however, I only recommend the translation by Ford Lewis Battles that is edited by John T. McNeill. (Monergism has an updated release of this translation, but I have not seen it yet.)

It is through Calvin's Institutes that I was introduced to Calvin's Commentaries which are free online. The fullness of Calvin's thought comes to life in the Institutes when supplemented by these commentaries.

2. "City of God" by Augustine of Hippo

Augustine is the man whom all other theologians stand upon. So it is easy to take him for granted, but remembering that Calvin's Institutes is only a footnote the works of Augustine will show you his immense influence upon me, even if indirectly. I have been influenced by his Confessions, Enchiridion, and especially the treaties "On The Trinity" but the City of God is the magnum opus that unfolds Augustine's thought in a romantic and illuminating way. Augustine is a orator, so his works were written to be read, but the arguments are so simple and clear, that the depth of what he has written is not always realized until others attempt to criticize him.

I particularly recommend the translation by Henry Bettenson that is available in the Penguin Classics series as a very cheap paperback.

3. "Freedom of the Will" by Jonathan Edwards

Jonathan Edwards was introduced to me through John Piper, and Edwards is a close second to John Calvin in his overall influence upon my understanding of theology. If there is anyone's opinion who can stand up to John Calvin, it is Jonathan Edwards. All 73 volumes of Edwards works are available online for free at Yale's Jonathan Edwards Center. There are many books I've read by Edwards, however the Freedom of the Will is the clearest and easiest to read, and is the apex book on Double Predestination. Anyone who disagrees with predestination will have to engage this masterpiece.

Although this is the most influential book by Edwards, there is an Unpublished Essay on the Trinity that has influenced me far more than anything else Edwards has written. This archive includes Freedom of the Will, and also Edward's Blank Bible, which I use all the time.

Edward's Religious Affections was a close second place. The Nature of True Virtue and many of his sermon readers are notable as well.

4. "Biblical Doctrines" by B.B. Warfield.

On the heals of Calvin and Edwards is B.B. Warfield. I am actually most influenced today by Warfield's "Calvin and Calvinism" but it is out of print. I was introduced to B.B. Warfield when I found several of his books at a used book store for a few dollars each. The first I read was the "Inspiration and Authority of the Bible" and I was impressed by how scholarly and evident Warfield argued his points, which was far better than any theology book I had ever read. However, it was very hard for me to choose which one of his books most influenced me, that is also easily available to purchase. So I have chosen Biblical Doctrines, which covers topics between "Calvin and Calvinism" to "Inspiration and Authority of the Bible". 

If you would like to be introduced to Warfield, I suggest starting with "Biblical Doctrines" instead and then read "Studies in Theology" after that before "Inspiration and Authority of the Bible".

5. "Jesus and the Victory of God" by N.T. Wright

N.T. Wright is influential in a different way than the previous three books. I would prefer to list the entire three volume "Christian Origins and the Question of God" series, but this is well over 1500pages, so I have chosen volume two as the most influential book, but volume three, "The Resurrection of the Son of God" (RSG), is a close second. The supreme value of N.T. Wright is his willingness to engage critical and liberal scholars and although many reformed theologians do not think he is conservative (or reformed enough), the overall value Wright adds is far beyond what he lacks. (N.T. Wright may challenge my suggestion that he lacks anything). The value of "Jesus and the Victory of God" (JVG) is that it is a productive look at the humanity of Christ which is often overshadowed by Christ's divine nature in reformed scholasticism.

The RSG is also a magnum opus of its own right, with an impressive bibliography, its hard to understand how this book was written in a man's lifetime.

N.T. Wright is most well known for his views in the New Perspective on Paul however, the first three volumes do not address this topic in depth, and I expect this to be discussed in the forth coming volume 4: "Paul and the Faithfulness of God". This is a six volume series but only the first three have been completed. The last two expected are on the four evangulists and a summary respectively. I've read many of Wright's shorter volumes on Paul, and highly recommend them as well, but it was JVG that introduced me to all the material on the Quest for the Historical Jesus. And as Wright said, the Reformation was the true first quest.

6. "The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God" by D.A. Carson

Carson has influenced me tremendously through online podcasts articles, and conferences. I have read several of this books, but this short title is supremely valuable for understanding theodicy in a reformed perspective. D.A. Carson's "Commentary on the Gospel of John" is an amazing work, but commentaries are not quite what I wish to discuss in this article. I may give another top ten on technical books or commentaries someday.

7. "The Death of Death in the Death of Christ: A Treatise in Which the Whole Controversy about Universal Redemption is Fully Discussed" by John Owen

"Death of Death" would have influenced me far more if I had had read it years ago. It is a definitive polemic on the "L" of the TULIP that is "Limited Atonement". John Owen has been popularized by Justin Taylor, and you may read many of John Owen's works online for free..

Another book by Owen that is excellent is his "Mortification of Sin." I highly recommend it as well.

8. "The Francis A. Schaeffer Trilogy: Three Essential Books in One Volume: The God Who Is There; Escape from Reason; He Is There and He Is Not Silent" by Francis Schaeffer

Schaeffer's Trilogy is an excellent introduction to engaging modernism and culture and understanding how worldviews have changed over the last two hundred years. This book was an invaluable introduction to many of the authors covered and I highly recommend him.

9. "A Theology of the New Testament" by G.E. Ladd

I am not so much influenced by Ladd as I once was, but for someone who has never read much theology beyond Christian Living, this is a great introduction to some amazing ideas. Much of this book was driven by answering Rudolf Bultmann's "Theology of the New Testament" and Ladd provides answers to Bultmann's demythologizing.

10. "Desiring God: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist" by John Piper

I had a hard time choosing "Desiring God" because I enjoyed Piper's "The Pleasures of God: Meditiations on God's Delight in Being God" much more. However, it was "Desiring God" that introduced me to everything I now love, so I am greatly indebted to the seeds this book sewed.

Honorable Mention: "Mere Christianity" by C.S. Lewis

It's been about a decade since I first read this book, but it was influential as a bridge from Christian Radio and Christian Living books into the meat of theology. Lewis has many aberrant theological views, but some of his arguments are ingenious. This is a must read for anyone starting out in theology, however many people today struggle with his ideas.

Notable References:

  • D. Martin-Llyod Jones, "Studies in the Sermons on the Mount"
  • Eusebius, "Church History"
  • Karl Rahner, "Trinity"
  • Schleiermacher, "On The Christian Faith"
  • Martin Luther's "Three Treaties: Babylon Captivity of the Church; Letter to the German Nobility; and 95 Thesis"

There are many great books that I've read which are not on this list, because these books are ones that have influenced me the most, and influence is a subjective metric, even to the point of saying tomorrow could produce a different list.

By: Wyatt Houtz

22Feb/110

Ten Theologians That Have Influenced Me

Here is my "Top Ten List of Most Influential Theologians." I'll quickly stress that the following theologians have influenced me the most, and only contains books that I've read too. I've excluded authors, if I've only read one of their books too. Some of these authors (like Calvin, Edwards and Warfield) are still very influential to me, but others like (G.E. Ladd and John Piper) were very helpful stepping-stones in the past but are no longer as influential to me as they once where. So there's several gotchas.

The following list is roughly in order by most influential theologian to least, and the titles are generally arranged by most influential to least influential with a supplemental list of related books I've read about the author worth noting.

  1. John Calvin

    1. Institutes of the Christian Religion
    2. Calvin Commentaries
    3. Related:
      1. John Calvin (a biography by Theodore Beza)
      2. Calvin (a biography by Bruce Gordon)
      3. Lectures on Calvinism (by Abraham Kuyper)
      4. The Legacy of Sovereign Joy:  God's Triumphant Grace in the Lives of Augustine, Luther, and Calvin (The Swans Are Not Silent)
      5. Calvin and Augustine (by Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield)
  2. Jonathan Edwards

    1. On The Freedom Of The Will
    2. An Unpublished Essay on the Trinity
    3. Religious Affections
    4. The Preciousness Of Time And The Importance Of Redeeming It
    5. The Nature of True Virtue
    6. The Sermons of Jonathan Edwards: A Reader
    7. The Blessing of God: Previously Unpublished Sermons of Jonathan Edwards
    8. The Blank Bible
    9. Related:
      1. Jonathan Edwards: A Life (a biography by George Marsden)
      2. The Supreme Harmony of All: The Trinitarian Theology of Jonathan Edwards by Amy Plantinga Pauw
  3. Augustine of Hippo

    1. On The Trinity
    2. The City of God (translated by Henry Bettenson)
    3. Confessions
    4. Enchiridion
    5. The Literal Meaning of Genesis Vol 1
    6. Related:
      1. The Legacy of Sovereign Joy:  God's Triumphant Grace in the Lives of Augustine, Luther, and Calvin (The Swans Are Not Silent)
      2. Calvin and Augustine (by Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield)
  4. Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield

    1. The Authority and Inspiration of the Scriptures
    2. Calvin and Augustine
    3. Biblical Doctrines
    4. Person and Work of Christ
    5. Studies in Theology
    6. Evolution, Science,  and Scripture: Selected Writings (edited by Mark Noll and David Livingstone)
    7. The Plan of Salvation
  5. D. A. Carson

    1. The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God
    2. Christ and Culture: Revisited
    3. The Gospel According to John
    4. Exegetical Fallacies
    5. The KJV Debate: A Plea for Realism
    6. For the Love of God: A Daily Companion for Discovering the Riches of God's Word Volume 1
    7. For the Love of God: A Daily Companion for Discovering the Riches of God's Word Volume 2
    8. The Farewell Discourse and Final Prayer of Jesus
    9. NT use of the OT
    10. Podcasts and online content
  6. N.T. Wright

    1. Resurrection of the Son of God
    2. Jesus and the Victory of God
    3. The New Testament People of God
    4. Paul: In Fresh Perspective
    5. Judas and the Gospel of Jesus
    6. Related:
      1. The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright (by John Piper)
  7. John Owen

    1. Death of Death in the Death of Christ
    2. On the Mortification of Sin in Believers
  8. John Piper

    1. Desiring God: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist
    2. The Pleasures of God: Meditations on God's Delight in Being God
    3. The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright
    4. The Legacy of Sovereign Joy:  God's Triumphant Grace in the Lives of Augustine, Luther, and Calvin (The Swans Are Not Silent)
    5. Podcasts and online content
  9. Martin Luther

    1. Table Talk
    2. 95 Thesis
    3. Babylonian Captivity of the Church
    4. Letter to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation
    5. Related:
      1. Here I Stand : A Life of Martin Luther (by Roland Bainton)
      2. The Legacy of Sovereign Joy:  God's Triumphant Grace in the Lives of Augustine, Luther, and Calvin (The Swans Are Not Silent)
  10. George Eldon Ladd

    1. Theology of the New Testament
    2. The New Testament and Criticism
    3. The Gospel of the Kingdom
    4. Related:
      1. A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd and the Rehabilitation of Evangelical Scholarship in America (a biography by John A. D’Elia)

By: Wyatt Houtz

21Jul/090

The Gospel According to John (Review)

The Gospel According to John by D.A. Carson is arguably the best commentary I have ever read on any book of the bible, especially the Gospel of John. Carson is consistently evangelistic, committed defending the Gospel and answering the best critics such as Rudolf Bultmann and C.H. Dodd, as well as redeeming the valuable material that the critics have produced. Carson also quotes the best arguments from other excellent commentaries such as The Gospel of John by F.F. Bruce. Indeed everything is in this one book, and this is demonstrated by 300 books listed in its bibliography.

One of Carson's best qualities, is that he will provide each argument, and then state which argument is the best, unlike other authors who are unwilling to risk being wrong. If you questions on anything in John from Philo's Logos to the Essenes to Passion Week timings to the pericopes to the John 21 appendage, Carson will have your answers. Go get it today! (Read online preview here).

Learn more about Donald A. Carson, PhD at this Trinity International University homepage.

By: Wyatt Houtz

22Jun/090

The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God (Review)

Does God love all people? It's not so simple as "God hates the sin but loves the sinner." It's a difficult question, because although God demonstrated love to the entire world through the sacrifice of His Son on the cross, that sacrifice ultimately results in an eternal judgment in the lake of fire, that is so severe, that its hard to say that God truly ever loved that lost person in the first place. So is it conscionable to tell a non-Christian that God loves them when God may have predestined them to hell? How do we confront Christians who have adopted heretical solutions like Free Will, Arminianism, Pelagisnism, or any sort of free will, etc.

These are some of the difficult questions addressed by D.A. Carson in his short book, The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God.  I admit, that this book is so good that I read the entire thing in one sitting, and wish you would do the same! If you haven't read a book by D.A. Carson, this is an excellent starting place! The first 25 pages are available online for free too.

Carson defines Compatibilism as the belief that "God's unconditioned sovereignty and the responsibility of human beings are mutually compatible." Compatibilism does not mean there is both Free Will and Predestination, but it does mean that even though an individual is predestined to reject Jesus, they are still responsible for rejecting Jesus. Compatibilism is the only solution to the problem of evil that maintains orthodoxy. Here's a quote from the book:

In short, compatibilism is a necessary component to any mature and orthodox view of God and the world. Inevitably it raises important and difficult questions regarding secondary causality, how human accountability should be grounded, and much more. I cannot probe those matters here.

I particularly enjoyed Carson's critiques of the hyper-Calvinists from the Reformed Tradition who struggled to understand evangelism.

I highly recommend this easy-to-read primer on the doctrine of God's Love. It's so short and the pages turn so fast, that you will be delighted by the whole thing, and it gets better with every page flipped. I hope you read it today!

By: Wyatt Houtz

12May/090

The Farewell Discourse and Final Prayer of Jesus

I found an out-of-print book by D.A. Carson at the library titled, "The Farewell Discourse and Final Prayer of Jesus: An Exposition of John 14-17." (There was a limited reprint of this book in the U.K. with the new title, Jesus and His Friends: An Exposition of John 14-17) This book is a 200pg non-technical commentary on the entire Farewell Discourse, including the High Priestly Prayer (John 17). These four chapters are among the most important in the bible, as well as most difficult to understand. This book slowly goes through the verses and explains them very clearly, and makes Jesus' cryptic discourse assessable to everyone.

D.A. Carson has an excellent technical commentary on the Gospel of John, which I am planning to read next, but if you want a good devotional commentary, I highly recommend this easy to read novel. Understanding predestination, election, the trinity and many difficult doctrines are packed in these brief sections. It would be easy to write another thousand pages on Jesus' High Priestly Prayer. If you come across this book, I highly recommend that  you snatch it up.

John 14-17 (ESV)

By: Wyatt Houtz

12Feb/090

Christ and Culture Revisited by D.A. Carson (Review)

D.A. Carson is arguably the greatest N.T. Theologian alive today. Carson has published over 50 books and this week I read one of his latest books: Christ and Culture Revisited (April 2008) and I highly recommend this book! D.A. Carson revisits H. Richard Niebuhr infamous and highly influential book "Christ and Culture" (1956).

Fifty years have passed since Niebuhr's book debuted, and Carson reevaluates Niebuhr's five categories on how Christ and Culture relate and how Niebuhr's categories have impacted the world for better and for worse. I would have appreciated the first quarter of the book if I had actually read Niebuhr's work, but I sheepishly admit that I have not read it. Nevertheless, D.A. Carson explained each of the five categories before he critiques them, so I still recommend this book, even if you have not read Niebuhr either. 

Christ and Culture Revisited begins by reevaluating each of Niebuhr's five categories:

  1. Christ against culture
  2. The Christ of culture
  3. Christ above culture
  4. Christ and culture in paradox
  5. Christ transforming culture

Carson discusses the impact of these five views on society and government. The advance of Secularism and Democracy and their influence on Christianity is discussed at length, especially in the case of "the separation of Church and State" in America and in European counties.

Carson provides revealing insight into Jesus' famous statement "Render to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's." (Matt 22:21). Carson makes a great point that although Caesar's image is on the coin, Caesar is a man made in the image of God. Carson also noted the treasonous implications of not paying tribune to Caesar. This particular passage has been used as a proof text for "the separation of Church and State." Carson considers some of the fundamental flaws in the philosophy of total separation.

I enjoyed Carson's evaluation of Thomas Jefferson and his Jefferson Bible. Most people are surprised to learn that the separation of Church and state is not part of the original constitution or bill of rights. The Establishment Clause prohibits the government from establishing a state religion but does not require the total separation from all religious involvement. Most of the original framers were Calvinist Christians but due to the advance of Democracy, Jefferson's subsequent writings have raised the high wall between state and church. Some of Jefferson's writings and Supreme Court precedent cases are also scrutinized by Carson. 

Carson touches on many other topics like Just War and Faith Based programs, and Theocracies. Overall, the book is a highly insightful into the worldviews prevalent today. I highly recommend this book as well as all of Carson's books and lectures. He is one of the few authors that I return to read again and again.

By: Wyatt Houtz

23Dec/080

Exegetical Fallacies by D.A. Carson (review)

I highly recommend D.A. Carson's book, Exegetical Fallacies to anyone who has ever looked at the original Greek version of a bible verse. I love to use the Blue Letter Bible website to gain insight into bible verses. I also love my Reverse Interlinear Greek and English bible.  So if you know just enough Greek words to be dangerous like I do, then this book is perfect for you.

I thought I was clever, until I read this book, and realized all my cleverness was wrapped up in "Exegetical Fallacies." I'm the most guilty of "root word" fallacies that Carson describes in Chapter 1. In John 21, Jesus reinstates Peter with three questions, "do you love me?" and since Jesus uses "agapao" and Peter responds with "phileo" but my english bible translates both words to "love." Carson proves that "love" is the correct translation since "phileo" and "agapao" are used interchangeably throughout John's letter. Another mistake I have often made, Carson calls, "Semantic Anachronism," and gives the example of Romans 1:19 when "power" is translated from "dynamis." I would conclude that Paul really means "dynamite" where the english has "power." You'll have to read the book to find out why!

I bought this book at the A Day with Dr. Don Conference at Mars Hill Church. D.A. Carson gave four one-hour lectures with a QA-session between each lecture. Mars Hill will post all four talks online, and I highly recommend listening to them all. So far, only the initial interview with D.A. Carson by Mark Driscoll|(video) and the first session "The Center of the Whole Bible" Romans 3:21-26" (audio)|(video) is online. Watch the resurgence feed for the remaining three sessions!

Update:
Session 1. The Center of the Whole Bible (Romans 3:21-26)
Session 2. The Strange Triumph of a Slaughtered Lamb (Revelation 12)
Session 3. A Miracle Full of Surprises (John 11)
Session 4. Why Doubt the Resurrection of Jesus (John 20:24-31)
Session 5. The Ironies of the Cross (Matthew 27:27-51)

By: Wyatt Houtz

14Jul/080

"NT use of the OT" review

I was excited to listen to D.A. Carson's podcasts about his latest book "Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament." This reference book consults every old testament verse quoted by the new testament and explains the context used by the NT. Unfortunately, I recommend the podcasts over the book if you plan to spend less than a few hours on this topic. Carson addresses James and 1-3 John but the rest of the NT are commissioned to other scholars.  I'm believe Carson approves all the other authors in the book, but I was hoping to have more Carson-exclusive content.

The content is very valuable but the information isn't catalogued well... so its really hard to skim the pages. All the pages look the same, because the same redundant paragraph titles are given to every passage, so it would be better if they weren't there at all. To appreciate this book, you have to ignore the chapter titles and focus on the content... good content but a lot of work for an alleged reference manual. I didn't use the scripture index at the end, but it may help this problem. Also, the book is organized by the books of the NT instead of a scripture list of OT quotations, so its hard to find out if other books of the NT quote the same verse; mostly because each book of the bible is commissioned to different theologians.

Although the content is amazing, the organization of the material makes it hard to find relevant verses. So if you enjoy reading the english dictionary straight through, you will enjoy this book, or if you are really struggling with the meaning of verses like Eph 4:8, then you can put the work in and find answers in this book, but if you want to just flip through this book, you won't glean as much information as it was hyped to yield.

I checked the book out of the Library, but I don't know if I'd pay $35 for my own copy of it. Although this book is very valuable, I wished it had more D.A. Carson content and a revelation on every page -- basically I desired the same reaction to the book as I received from the podcasts but was left wanting. I've you listen to all six podcasts that I posted, then I recommend buying the book. Nevertheless, I still recommend every word that D.A. Carson produces!

By: Wyatt Houtz

3Jun/080

Bible Commentaries

Here are a couple important bible commentaries that I would recommend you read first before consulting others. Martin Luther's commentary on Galatians and Romans and John Calvin's commentary  on the whole bible. Modern scholars still refer to John Calvin's extensive writings.

For audio commentaries, go to monergism.com and listen to anything by D.A. Carson, Tim Keller, John Piper, R.C. Sproul. Also a great reference is DesiringGod.org's Scripture Index.

Tracy and I enjoy published works as well. We are reading D.A. Carson's "For the Love of God" Vol 1. & Vol 2 for our daily devotions. He also has wrote commentaries on Matthew, and others that are published but I haven't read them yet. D.A. Carson's audio "Expositions of the Book of Revelation" is available for free on mongerism.com

Go to these sources first, before consulting any others!

By: Wyatt Houtz

26May/080

Mcheyne Bible Reading Plan

Tracy and I are reading the Mcheyne Bible Reading Plan. It's a famous reading plan that goes through the New Testament and Psalms twice and the Old Testament twice in one year. I made an RSS feed that you can subscribe to in Google Reader or your favorite RSS program: http://www.havenofbliss.com/rss/mcheyne/. D.A. Carson has made a two volume commentary on this bible reading plan that you may read as a supplement called "For The Love Of God." We bought both volumes, but both go through the entire year, so I recommend buying one and then if you make it through, then buy the other. Either way, its a great reference and has been an excellent devotional! We are reading both Volume 1 and Volume 2.

The M'Cheyne reading plan features two "secret" and two "family" readings per day, for a total of four chapters. The family ones are meant to be read with your whole family and the secret are for private devotion. D.A. Carson has a modified version of the plan that covers the same material but spreads it over two years. I recommend Carson's version to anyone who struggles to keep up with Bible-Reading-Plans. I've spent about an hour and a half every day writing notes on the M'Cheyne plan and hope to scan my journals and post them online when I'm done. Cross your fingers! I've also converted the M'Cheyne plan into a text file that you can download here.

By: Wyatt Houtz

   

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