Author Archives: William Boekestein

A Well-Ordered Church (Introduction)

I’ve recently begun preaching a series called, “A Well-Ordered Church.” The series is based on seventeen foundational principles of reformed church government which are appended to the Church Order of the United Reformed Churches of North America.

In the coming weeks, Lord willing, I’ll be posting short clips from each of the messages with links to the full sermon videos. For now, here are the seventeen principles I’ll be interacting with: Read More »

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My Few Minutes as an FBI Agent

I have to share this though it’s not exactly deep.

I just got back from getting my vehicle inspected at a mechanic shop (a yearly requirement in PA). While the mechanic was checking my car over another “technician” must have been eying me suspiciously as I sat in the shop on a broken-down ATV reading Sean Lucas’ little booklet What is Church Government in preparation for a sermon series I’m working through. With no warning, he suddenly blurted out from across the shop: “Are you from the FBI er’ somethin’?”

Bewildered, I turned my head in his direction. “A-Are you talking to me?” I asked.

“Yep”

“No, I’m not, why do you ask?”

“You just look kinda surfistercated,” he said.

Now to appreciate just how weird this was to me, I was wearing old flip-flops, cargo shorts and a print t-shirt. (After my “accuser” and I got to talking a bit I realized that it was the fact that I was reading that roused his suspicion about me.)

This experience got me thinking about how silly it is to suppose that we can reach people by dressing a certain way. Unless we are prepared to change our wardrobe every time we move from one demographic to the next (or unless we are only interested in reaching one particular demographic) this approach is simply ridiculous. The fact is, this experience was counter-cultural even though the shop was a mere 10 minutes from my house. Wearing the right clothes will never bridge cultural gaps, only the gospel will.

Posted in Christian Living, Gospel, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Against the World: Radio Interview

A few weeks ago Mike Conroy and I spoke with Larry Souder (WPEL FM) about the upcoming conference on Athanasius.

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For more information visit the 2010 conference page.

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His Darkness, Our Light

How do we understand the darkness that surrounded the cross in the hours preceding the death of Christ? How does this darkness relate to the darkness that we go through? Here are a few thoughts.

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“Life Lessons from a Calloused Christian” Radio Interview

Thanks to Larry Souder from WPEL for allowing me to talk about my study guide to the book of Jonah. Click here to order Life Lessons from a Calloused Christian available from “Reformed Fellowship.”

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The Suffering Savior

One of my favorite devotional books is Frederick Krummacher’s The Suffering Servant, subtitled, “Meditations on the Last Days of Christ” (first pub. 1854). It was of great devotional help as I recently preached through the last few chapters of Mark’s gospel. I did have to be very careful, however, to read him only after my sermons were completely finished or the temptation to plagiarize would have been very strong. Here are two of my favorite paragraphs from the book (Chicago: Moody Press, 1947). Read More »

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5 things Teens Want Their Parents to Know…But May Not Be Telling Them

This article first appeared in Proclamation a free monthly discipleship newsletter. To be added to our print mailing list write to covenantrc@verizon.net

One of the social highlights of my year happened this spring. I didn’t attend a high-profile conference or speak to a group of “dignitaries.” Instead, I had the privilege of sitting on the grass surrounded by twenty high-schoolers sharing in one the most honest and sincere conversations I’ve had in some time.

I asked a few teens if they would help me write an article on some of their family struggles. Our discussion centered around several questions that could be summed up in one: “What would you like your parents to understand about you?” This conversation was not designed to be a complaint session but, rather, the questions were carefully asked and, for the most part, thoughtfully and respectfully answered. Wanting to avoid the bandwagon effect, I asked the students to write down their answers first before we discussed them. Notwithstanding this safeguard, their answers were strikingly similar.

This article will seem rather lop-sided. It is. Remember, this is just one side of what, ideally, would be a two-way conversation. But I believe if parents would take these concerns seriously, they might hear themselves reading in a younger voice, reminiscent of when they were teenagers.

What follows are five things your teens would like you to know but may not be telling you. Take these points for what they are worth, but keep in mind that they come from the real words of real teenagers who are quite likely similar to yours. Read More »

Posted in Discipleship, Family, Proclamation, culture | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

‘Wannabe Cool’ Christianity

Here’s another great article from Brett McCracken, this time from the Wall Street Journal. Here’s his closing paragraph:

If we are interested in Christianity in any sort of serious way, it is not because it’s easy or trendy or popular. It’s because Jesus himself is appealing, and what he says rings true. It’s because the world we inhabit is utterly phony, ephemeral, narcissistic, image-obsessed and sex-drenched—and we want an alternative. It’s not because we want more of the same.

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Why Calvinism is Hot

Perhaps you’ve already seen this but Brett McCracken has written an excellent piece explaining why Calvinism has been experiencing something of an upsurge. Here’s one of his points:

Calvinism fears God. A healthy fear of God is totally lost on contemporary Christianity, which sees him as more of a “buddy/friend/therapist/guru” than the creator and sustainer of the universe. More and more young people are growing dubious of God-lite and prefer thinking of him as a commanding, dominating, dangerous God who deserves our deferential fear.

Interesting, I was just last night dialoging with a local church-shopper who said essentially the same thing. Click here to read “Calvinism: So Hot Right Now” in full.

To the surprise of many, Time magazine recently listed “The New Calvinism” as the third most important idea changing the world “right now.” What?? 500 years after the birth of John Calvin, is his theological namesake really enjoying resurgence in 2009?

I guess I’m not totally surprised. I’ve noticed the trend myself. I read Collin Hansen’s Young, Restless, Reformed last year. I’ve been to Mars Hill Church in Seattle. I’ve witnessed many young Christian friends getting totally passionate about the Reformation and everything it represents.

But why is it happening now? What is it about Calvinism that is suddenly more appealing than it was just a decade ago? Here are a few of my initial thoughts—as someone who increasingly identifies with Reformed ideas (though not 100%):

Calvinism is about certainty.
In an era in which certainty is hard to come by and ambiguity is frequently championed, more and more young people are longing for something that is rock-solid certain. In Calvinism, there is no second-guessing about whether I’ve done enough or prayed the sinners prayer earnestly enough to be saved, because it has nothing to do with my own powers.

Calvinism emphasizes sin (total depravity) and places it at the starting point, rather than as a footnote. It cuts us humans down to size from the get go, underscoring both our desperate need for redemption and righteousness and our utter inability to achieve it ourselves. I think this really resonates with younger people today, who have grown up in a world that has told them they are good boys and girls who can do whatever they want to in life. They’ve been met with yeses at every turn, but are longing for nos. They recognize that they are far from the angelic harbingers of goodness that their parents, teachers, and advertisers have deemed them. Calvinism tells it like it is.

Calvinism views God in the highest way possible. He is sovereign and fearsome and awesome in ways we can’t begin to understand. While “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” doesn’t sound comforting, many people would still rather be in the hands of an angry God who is sovereign than a buddy God who is only partially sovereign and sometimes surprised (see Open Theism). In times of crisis and tragedy, an all-powerful God who effects everything to his purposes is so much more comforting than a God who isn’t in complete control.

Calvinism has a beautiful picture of grace. It is irresistible and unconditional. When God sets his eyes on us, we can’t escape his pursuit (and who would want a God who couldn’t capture those he sought to save?). As Sufjan Stevens beautifully sings in “Seven Swans”: He will take you / If you run / He will chase you / Because he is the Lord.

It rings true to many young people that nothing they can humanly do could ever achieve salvation—at least more true than the idea that God, the author and perfecter of our faith, saves only on the condition of some action on the part of the saved. On the contrary, the Calvinist view insists that we have no recourse to self-sufficiency or pride. As Paul writes in Galatians, “far be it from me to boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (6:14).

Calvinism fears God. A healthy fear of God is totally lost on contemporary Christianity, which sees him as more of a “buddy/friend/therapist/guru” than the creator and sustainer of the universe. More and more young people are growing dubious of God-lite and prefer thinking of him as a commanding, dominating, dangerous God who deserves our deferential fear.

Calvinism ground itself in the bible rather than sugarcoated feel-goodisms. Consider what J.I. Packer says about this when he contrasts the “new” and “old” gospels in his famous introduction to John Owen’s The Death of Death in the Death of Christ:

“The pitiable Savior and the pathetic God of modern pulpits are unknown to the old gospel. The old gospel tells men that they need God, but not that God needs them (a modern falsehood); it does not exhort them to pity Christ but announces that Christ has pitied them, though pity was the last thing they deserved. It never loses sight of the divine majesty and sovereign power of the Christ whom it proclaims but rejects flatly all representations of him that would obscure his free omnipotence.”

Calvinism is a little bit edgy, dark, and punk rock. It is less about hugs, Sunday School pink lemonade and “God loves you” than it is about discipline, deference and “God hates you in your sin; you are a wretch who needs God’s grace.” It’s not for the faint of heart or the easily offended. Kids like this.

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Athanasius Against the World

The center of the Christian world is presently experiencing a geographical migration from the Northern to the Southern Hemisphere and specifically to Africa. It is estimated that more than 360 million Christians throughout the world today are Africans.

Call it a resurgence.

North Africa was one of the leading centers of Christian thought for most of the first millennia after Christ. Near the center of North African Christian thought was a fourth century Egyptian Bishop named Athanasius; a churchmen revered by Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant Christians alike.

On September 11, Life Reformation’s 2010 conference, “Against the World” features six presentations on Athanasius’ life and thought. It’s free, local (Dunmore) and open to the public. The following vignette is an encouragement to readers to come out and learn from this man who, though small in stature, looms large on the pages of Christian history. Read More »

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