Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Where do I start with Reformed Theology?

This past Sunday, I began preaching on the distinctions of Veritas - trying to answer the question "What is different (not better) about Veritas Church?"  The first distinction had to do with our theological convictions:

Veritas holds to reformed theology.  By this, we mean that we generally agree with the theology that was recovered in the 16th and 17th centuries during the Protestant Reformation – we believe the reformers had it right, and recovered the theology of men like Augustine, the Apostle Paul, and Jesus.

Some of you are new to reformed theology and so I promised to post some resources to get you started:

  • If you're struggling to understand the 1689 confession, but want to, buy Samuel Waldron's commentary.
  • If you're looking for a good, historical, reformed catechism (summary of theological beliefs in question and answer format) check out the Heidelberg Catechism.
  • If you're looking for a book that will be a great primer on reformed theology, purchase R.C. Sproul's "What is Reformed Theology."
  • And finally, the best website to find articles and books that will answer your questions biblically is, in my opinion, Monergism.




Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Book Recommendations following Sunday's sermon...

I didn't have time to rattle off these book recommendations on Sunday.  I preached about a disciple of Jesus being one who knows Him, believes Him, obeys Him, enjoys Him, and proclaims Him to the ends of the earth.  Here are some books I recommend:

Weak in knowledge?
"The Christian Life" by Sinclair Ferguson
"What Does God Want of us Anyway" by Mark Dever

Weak in belief?
"Prodigal God" by Timothy Keller
"Death by Love" by Mark Driscoll

Weak in obedience?
"How Should I Live in This World" by R.C. Sproul (short booklet)
"You Can Change" by Tim Chester

Weak in enjoyment?
"Dangerous Duty of Delight" by John Piper
"The Art of Divine Contentment" by Thomas Watson (Kristen's top pick)

Weak in proclamation?
"Celtic Way of Evangelism" by George G. Hunter
"The Gospel and Personal Evangelism" by Mark Dever