Denny Burk, Welcome Back Service (1 Samuel 18:20-30)

Posted on August 8, 2009

Dr. Burk welcomes new and returning students to Boyce College at the beginning of the 2009 Fall semester. His text is 1 Samuel 18:20-30, and the sermon is titled “Opposition: The Sequel to Triumph.”

(Pictured above are students singing an impromptu “Happy Birthday” to Student Council President Stephen Ripley at the Welcome Back Ice Cream social.)

Denny Burk, Boyce College Commissioning Service

Posted on August 7, 2009

Dr. Burk commissions incoming Boyce College freshmen as they begin their studies.

Dean Burk’s 2009 Boyce College Commencement Address

Posted on May 8, 2009

Dean Denny Burk delivers a commencement address from 1 Thessalonians 2:13.

President Mohler’s 2009 Boyce College Commencement Address

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President Mohler delivers a commencement address from Colossians 2:13-23.

Pictures of 2009 Boyce College Graduation

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Pictures from 2009 Boyce College Banquet

Posted on April 24, 2009

Assessing the Piper-Wright Debate on Justification

Posted on April 16, 2009

Yesterday, Tom Schreiner, Mark Seifrid, Brian Vickers, and I had a conversation with the students of Boyce College about Paul’s doctrine of justification. In particular, we discussed Tom Wright’s new book Justification: God’s Plan & Paul’s Vision, which is largely a response to John Piper’s 2007 book The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright.

Download Here

The audio begins about halfway through my opening remarks. So I will print below my full opening statement so that you can read how I set up the discussion.

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WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION

I want to welcome all of you to the final Boyce Chapel meeting of the year. As you all know, we are doing something a little bit different today. In lieu of our normal chapel service, we meet today for a theology forum to discuss the topic of justification in writings of the apostle Paul. In particular, we are concerned with the debate that is heating up around the publication of two books, one by John Piper and the other by N. T. Wright.

N. T. Wright is the Bishop of Durham and one of the world’s leading New Testament scholars. He is associated with the “new perspective” on Paul and has been writing and speaking about Paul’s doctrine of justification for many years. His views are widely known and widely embraced in the evangelical movement. In addition to numerous articles on the topic, several of Wright’s books have been seminal in this conversation: The Climax of the Covenant, What St. Paul Really Said, and Paul: In Fresh Perspective (to name a few).

John Piper is the pastor of the Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 2007, Dr. Piper wrote a book to refute N. T. Wright’s views on justification, The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright. As the title suggests, Piper does not aim in this book to refute the “new perspective” on Paul as a whole, but rather he sets his sights narrowly on N. T. Wright. In particular, Piper interrogates the notion (found numerous times throughout Wright’s published writings) that Christians will be justified at the final judgment based upon works (Future of Justification, p. 22). Piper’s assessment of Wright is stark and unflinching: “I am not optimistic that the biblical doctrine of justification will flourish where N. T. Wright’s portrayal holds sway. I do not see his vision as a compelling retelling of what Saint Paul really said. And I think, as it stands now, it will bring great confusion to the church at a point where she desperately needs clarity. . . When it comes to the deeper issues of how justification really works both in Scripture and the human soul, I don’t think N. T. Wright is as illuminating as Martin Luther or John Owen or Leon Morris (Future of Justification, pp. 24-25).

Today we are gathered to discuss Wright’s new book which is in the main a rejoinder to Piper’s 2007 book from which I just quoted. Wright’s book is titled Justification: God’s Plan & Paul’s Vision. The book is set to be released in America in June of this year, but InterVarsity Press graciously sent us an advance copy so that our panel might read and discuss the issues today. By his own admission, N. T.Wright doesn’t really say anything new in this book. Most of the material in this book is a recapitulation of what he has written elsewhere (Justification, p. 13). Nevertheless, the specific engagement with Piper is new, and I’ll read a little passage to you to give an idea of the tenor of Wright’s response to Piper: “For John Piper and the school of thought he represents, present justification appears to take the full weight. Piper and others have then accused me of encouraging people to think of their own moral effort as contributing to their final justification, and hence of compromising the gospel itself. I insist that I am simply trying to do justice to what Paul actually says, and that when we factor in the Spirit to the whole picture we see that the charge is groundless” (Justification, pp. 12-13).

INTRODUCING THE PANEL

Tom Schreiner’s work in Pauline studies is vast and well-known. Not only is he the author of a significant commentary on Romans (BECNT), but he also has a commentary forthcoming on Galatians. In addition to numerous articles on Paul’s letters, he has written a guide to Interpreting the Pauline Epistles (Baker), a Pauline theology titled Paul Apostle of God’s Glory in Christ: A Pauline Theology (IVP), and The Law and Its Fulfillment: A Pauline Theology of Law.

Mark Seifrid’s contributions to this topic are also well-known. D. A. Carson hailed Dr. Seifrid’s book Christ Our Righteousness (New Studies in Biblical Theology, IVP) as having a “prophetic quality.” Dr. Seifrid was an editor and a contributor to the 2 volume work Justification and Variegated Nomism [vol. 1, vol. 2](Baker). N. T. Wright disputes in particular Dr. Seifrid’s contributions in this set (concerning covenant and righteousness language in Paul). In addition to numerous articles, Dr. Seifrid has also authored Justification by Faith: The Origin and Development of a Central Pauline Theme (Brill) and The Pauline Writings: An Annotated Bibliography (Baker). Last year, Dr. Seifrid wrote an article for Concordia Theological Quarterly titled, “The Narrative of Scripture and Justification by Faith: A Fresh Response to N.T. Wright.”

Brian Vickers produced a book in 2006 titled Jesus’ Blood and Righteousness (Crossway). Dr. Vickers’s contribution to this conversation in fascinating as he defends a fairly traditional model of the imputation of Christ’s righteousness, though he does so in a way that interprets key Pauline texts in a non-traditional way.

My name is Denny Burk. I am the Dean of Boyce College, and I will be moderating.

Brian Payne, “The Branch” (Zechariah 6:9-15)

Posted on April 7, 2009

Dr. Brian Payne delivers an exposition of Zechariah 6:9-15.

Russell Moore, “Acquiring Wisdom in Your College Years” (1 Kings 3:3-15)

Posted on March 23, 2009

Dr. Russell Moore delivers a message at Dorm Meeting on 1 Kings 3:3-15.

Chad Brand, “Everybody Wants To Be Happy” (Matthew 5:1-6)

Posted on March 16, 2009

Dr. Chad Brand delivers a message at Dorm Meeting on Matthew 5:1-6.