R. C. Sproul, James Boice, and J. I. Packer were already stirring
many evangelicals with the vision of a great God who saves sinners by a
grace that is amazing from start to finish. Out of the Philadelphia
Conference on Reformed Theology, chaired by Dr. Boice, a host of annual
conferences sprouted up across North America. Ligonier Ministries gained
a national platform. Inspired and nourished by these efforts, several
of us started the White Horse Inn and Modern Reformation 20
years ago out of a concern that we need to recover the riches of the
Reformation, with the gospel of justification in Christ alone, by grace
alone, through faith alone, at its heart.
Over these two decades, we’ve been through a series of controversies
within evangelicalism about the character of God and his gospel: open
theism, Evangelicals and Catholics Together, and the “emergent”
movement, to name a few. Along the way, we’ve engaged Robert Schuller,
with the publication of his Self-Esteem: The New Reformation,
at a moment when it seemed from the Christian best-seller list that
Christianity was being radically re-written in the subjective and
therapeutic categories of modernity.
There are still enormous challenges, of course. As our latest issue of Modern Reformation
points out, the diet of Christian trade books doesn’t exactly point in
the direction of widespread renewal of catechesis. Nevertheless, there
has been a proliferation of gospel-centered resources. Groups like the
Gospel Coalition and Together for the Gospel sponsor large national
conferences. Reared on moralism, a number of younger pastors—many of
larger nondenominational churches—are being gripped by grace.
Just think of some of the titles of late in this genre: The Gospel as Center, D. A. Carson; The Prodigal God, Tim Keller; Jesus + Nothing = Everything, Tullian Tchividjian; Gospel: Recovering the Power that Made Christianity Revolutionary, J. D. Greear; The Good News We Almost Forgot, Kevin DeYoung; What Is the Gospel?,
Greg Gilbert. I’ve added a few of my own logs to the “gospel” fire, so I
can only rejoice in what Charles Swindoll called a while back “the
grace awakening.” Continue at Michael Horton
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