Category Archives: American History

TIM KELLER’S GO TO BOOK

I recently interviewed Tim Keller.

During that interview, I asked this question:

Moore: I have read four of your books (The Reason for God, Counterfeit God, Every Good Endeavor, and Walking with God Through Pain and Suffering). Though they are very different books, I noticed that all four cite Andrew Delbanco’s, The Real American Dream: a Mediation on Hope. Why is that book so formative to your thinking?

Keller: It is a terrific analysis of contemporary American culture, put into the context of American history. Delbanco says that American cultural history has had three phases—each one centering on one high priority. He lists them: “God. Nation. Self.” I don’t think you can improve on the simplicity and penetration of that analysis.

I don’t think his book is necessarily more formative than any other book to my thinking, but it is so broadly applicable—to psychology, vocation, politics, sexuality, religion, or whatever. That’s why it’s hard not to cite it, no matter what the subject.

Now that I have finished Delbanco’s book, I concur wholeheartedly.

WAS JESUS MARRIED?

The question is about as absurd as the picture.
This past Monday night I was coming back from a board meeting for our ministry and heard the host and his guest speculating wildly.  They even gave credence that the wedding of Cana in Galilee was in fact the wedding of Jesus!
Speculation is fun.  Speculation allows us to avoid the clear and many times hard edges of revelation’s claims.

WE DON’T HAVE THAT MUCH TO FEAR

As Americans, we take many things for granted.  For example, we tend to think the answer to poverty in developing nations is getting them adequate resources.  Of course, things like food and medicines are badly needed.  But there is something more foundational that we tend to miss.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/25/opinion/brooks-the-republic-of-fear.html

AMERICAN CHRISTIANS ARE MORE LIKE BEN FRANKLIN THAN JONATHAN EDWARDS

“I think ironically American evangelicals often seem to be more followers of Benjamin Franklin than they are of Jonathan Edwards.  They [evangelicals] admire practicality, friendliness, moralisms, easy formulas, and quantifiable results.  And while these Franklin-esque traits aren’t all bad they sometimes contribute to evangelical superficiality.  And we all know they are the equivalent of spiritual purveyors of junk food that have long capitalized on evangelicalisms’ market-driven economy.”

Marsden went on to say he had gone by a church sign the previous year during Fourth of July which proclaimed, “The last four letters in American are I can.”

George Marsden, “The Legacy of Jonathan Edwards,” Beeson Divinity School, Nov. 12, 2004.

HT to Thomas Kidd (aka Tommy) for bringing this terrific lecture to my attention.

http://www.beesondivinity.com/podcast#!/swx/pp/media_archives/99668/episode/47187

DAVID BARTON’S AMERICA IS NOT AMERICA

This piece is full of wise insight.  Instead of desiring the Good-Housekeeping Seal of Approval from the culture, let’s make sure we get the faith once delivered for the saints correct!

http://faithandamericanhistory.wordpress.com/2014/02/27/whats-really-at-stake-in-the-christian-america-debate/

HT to John Fea, a regular stop for me and should be for all historically minded Christians.  Hey that should mean all Christians!