Go!
A Dallas Seminary legend passed into the presence of the Lord last Monday. Dr. J. Dwight Pentecost, aka “Dr. P.”
He was 99 years and 4 days old, and only months after his last teaching session on our campus!
He came here in 1937 as student #100, in the then 12-year-old school that was Dallas Theological Seminary. And he’s stayed here since!
Over 10,000 students taught. Over 20 books written. Over 62 years of faithful marriage. Over 55 years teaching at DTS.
Pastor, professor,
Interview on Genesis: A Theological Commentary for Preachers
Here’s a recent interview of me conducted by my friend and once-Seminary-classmate, Dr. Charles Savelle. It ran the other day on his informative blog that deals with all matters related to Bible exposition. I’ve borrowed it off his website; you can find the interview here.]
CS: How did Genesis: A Theological Commentary for Preachers come about?
AK: Well, I’m on a crusade! I have been engaged in laying out a somewhat new hermeneutic for approaching
Red!
Couple of weeks ago, I woke up early. 2:08 am to be exact. To see the “Blood Moon.”
(If you missed, don’t worry. That’s why Al Gore invented the Internet!)
If you want to really see another one, you’re in luck. There are three more on the way: October 8, this year, and then April 4 and September 28, in 2015.
Unusual. This is called a tetrad. Four successive total lunar eclipses, with no partial eclipses in between, and each separated from its neighbors
Mine!
My third and last installment of a few amateur reflections on the text and score of St. Matthew Passion by the venerable J. S. Bach (1685–1750).
This guy really is doing something with what he has composed. So there is real merit (and marvelous fruit) in not only just listening to the work, but also looking at it closely.
So also for all texts. Particularly, the Bible. The text, rather than being a plain-glass window, is actually a stained-glass window.
Stuart Briscoe: How I Preach
Stuart Briscoe: And this is How I Preach …
[Stuart and I shared a pulpit a few months ago at Moody Bible Institute’s Founder’s Week in Chicago. There, I persuaded him to let us in on his preaching techniques and schemes. The man has been preaching for almost seven decades. And he’s still going strong, teaching the Bible across oceans and on every continent, after having pastored Elmbrook Church, in Brookfield, Wisconsin, the largest church in that state, for thirty
Cross!
Last week, as I had mentioned in my last post, the Dallas Bach Society performed the St. Matthew Passion by ye olde Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750).
My passion (crusade?) is to pay close attention to biblical texts, to figure out what authors do with what they say. They not only say things, but they are doing something in/with their saying. They are accomplishing something. A divine demand is being made in every text. And to that, we readers are expected
Son!
Last night, I had a wonderful opportunity to listen again to a live performance of THE St. Matthew Passion, courtesy of the Dallas Bach Society.
A remarkable sacred oratorio written by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750), probably around 1727. There are both solos and pieces for double choir (two four-part choirs). The Passion also employs a double orchestra—two sets of instrumentalists, each set having two recorders, two flutes, two oboes, two violins, a viola,