Discussion with Piper and Carson

Park Community Church | Chicago

Owen Strachan: Before we start, I just want to say that one book that I would commend for those of you who are very interested in what we’ve talked about tonight is Doug Sweeney’s upcoming book from InterVarsity Press. It’s called Jonathan Edwards and the Ministry of the Word. Dr. Sweeney sparked a lot of my thoughts on this topic, which is why I proposed this event and I would just commend it to you. It’s coming out soon. The Henry Center booth has flyers for it and Doug will get your heart fired up either for theological pastoral ministry or scholarly ministry. So look for that book in days to come.

Because you both questioned the use of “scholar” in the event title, I just wanted to say what I was thinking in offering that title and then have you respond. In the past, it seems to me that theology was done for the church. There is certainly and always will be a place for high-level academic theology — theology among the experts — but it seems to me that in the past, men like Augustine, Luther, Calvin, Edwards, Warfield, and many others including the Puritans thought of themselves as theologians of the highest level, but for the church. So they weren’t writing books just to be smart in the way that you kind of talked about a few minutes ago, Dr. Carson, they were writing to build up and edify the church and draw lost people to the beauty of the Christian faith in the way that you write about Dr. Piper. That’s what I was thinking of when I proposed this. You could substitute theologian for scholar, and you could again add that tagline: for the church. Is that something that makes sense? Does that help clarify the two callings?

John Piper: No, because there are different levels at which you can do that. I mean, if you take Jonathan Edwards’s Nature of True Virtue, it was written for the sake of the church. But I doubt that any lay people have gotten much help from it at all. And so that’s what I mean by there are different levels. You take his Religious Affections, and that’s another level. They’re both powerful books, but one has zero Scripture in it and is talking about “consent to being”. What in the world is “consent to being”? And he’s just operating at a cutting-edge, philosophical-response level. So I think it’s okay to do that. There should be people who do that, not me. I’m going to do the Religious Affections level. The reason that didn’t help me is because, if you’d ask me, “Are you one of those?” I just have to make distinctions again.

Owen Strachan: Okay.

D.A. Carson: Yes. I think that there is another factor that’s being left out. At many occasions in the history of the church, the most learned person around, not only in the church but also in the entire society, was the pastor. And until the explosion of knowledge in the latter half of the Enlightenment, they were thinkers who learned so many things on so many fronts. The pastor was an exegete but was also studying some biology, and they were the most knowledgeable people around. So one of the reasons why you had so many unconverted people that wanted to be pastors was because this was also the path toward the life of learning. But eventually the place of learning was not in pastoral ministry; it was in the university, or it was a secular approach to knowledge and this sort of thing. And the pastor becomes someone who’s working with a narrower sphere.

And then you had the breakup of the great evangelical institutions such that you had more and more people getting their theological training in minor Bible institutes and things like that. And the whole life of the mind for a hundred years was less and less well treated in the North American context with some remarkable exceptions until you had the founding of the great evangelical institutions and the revitalizing of all of them, again, starting with Fuller in 1947 and so forth. Trinity, for all of its strength, started as a seminary really in 1961. That’s it. And John was right to say that there was a generation in there that was the transitional generation and was far more lonely. There were not many of these front rank thinkers. They just weren’t there. So in the 1950, the number of front rank evangelical commentaries written in English were pathetic. There was just almost nothing there. They were semi-pop things.

John Piper: FF Bruce?

D.A. Carson: FF Bruce, that was about it. And he’d written a few. And after you said FF Bruce, well, you could say FF Bruce. I mean, RVG Tasker was doing a little tindale bits, but there was just nothing there. And so people look back with nostalgia to the great days of FF Bruce. Where’s a scholar standing head and shoulders above everybody like FF Bruce? Well, I’ll tell you why he was standing head and shoulders above everyone; it’s because there was nobody else to stand above. He was a great scholar in many ways, but there was no competition. Nowadays, there are many who have the capacity of an FF Bruce because of an FF Bruce, do you see?

For all of the facts that there are all kinds of declines in the West in moral and other areas, that’s true; nevertheless, in the area of biblical theological scholarship — I know it’s mixed and it’s compromised and all the rest — there’s great grounds for encouragement too. There are huge things for which to be thankful. And nowadays, there’s a major crisis coming along in the church in some area, and there are going to be some Christians that are going to be addressing it, thinking it through. That’s wonderful. So I don’t think it’s those sorts of questions like, “Who’s a pastor? Who’s a scholar?” and where the drifts are. Those aren’t just turning on one thing like writing for the church; it’s turned on a lot of things, sociological and historical and so forth.

Owen Strachan: Okay, I have one pushback. Jonathan Edwards’s A Divine and Supernatural Light or Heaven is a World of Love, or many other sermons are some of the richest, most theologically astute sermons you could find. It’s some of the most beautiful writing in the English language, I think, and I’m guessing you might agree. He obviously has a brilliant mind. So I’m not thinking we should all go and try to be like him and write like him, but he is doing theological work in those sermons in a way that I wonder if many pastors can’t try to do, not to try to be smart, and not get degrees to try to look good, but to push their minds, challenge themselves, and do that kind of theology for the church. Yes, we should have academic theologians who write high level theology, who engage in their own conversations, but who also in a very Edwardsian way, write for the church as well. Does that make more sense? Is that the kind of thing we could emulate?

John Piper: Well, I totally say amen. So that doesn’t sound like pushback. That sounds like agreement. So I love that. That’s what I would like to call men to do as much as they can do, and to grow in their capacities to learn Greek and Hebrew if you can, and be as meditative on 2 Corinthians 4:4–6 as you can. I mean, Edwards was able to do that because he could look at that passage — “The god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2 Corinthians 4:4) — and see worlds of implication. So that’s what I want. I want people to see that. So it does take a kind of work — I don’t know if the word scholarly is best because I like theological better — and a breadth of awareness of what’s been said in other parts of the Scripture that are coming to bear on that as you read it.

It also takes an unusually imaginative, penetrating mind to take every one of those words — light of gospel, of glory, of Christ who is — and see through. And the more theological you are, the more vast the worlds are that open with each of those words. So we want meditative, reflecting, long-staring at the text type thinkers. So thinking is what I’m after if I’m trying to beget theological pastors. Take a text and think deeply about it. It helps if you can go through the Greek and Hebrew, and it helps if you know other parts of Scripture. But go deep, penetrate through, and think your way through and then put it all back together in a synthetic way, and then do the Divine and Supernatural Light sermon. Yes, the answer is yes.

D.A. Carson: Yes, but . . . There’s a sense which I agree entirely.

John Piper: Just one sentence.

D.A. Carson: Yeah, the but is that we’re not all Jonathan Edwards. So some people who simply try to emulate him eventually try to build a systematic theology out of each word and then lose what the local text actually says. It’s methodologically flawed. They think they’re doing what Edwards did, but they don’t have his skills. And so you want at the same time to throw in other things as well and to recognize differences and give some grace even while, yeah, I do want people to be working to their full capacity as theologians and so forth. How come you can say three minutes worth and I’m restricted to one sentence?

John Piper: I don’t think it was that way with the last question.

D.A. Carson: Oh yeah. Okay. Okay.

Owen Strachan: No, I don’t think so. This is my final question for you, and then we’re going to go to Q and A. Let’s focus on pastors for a minute. If a pastor heard your talks, synthesized them, and caught a vision for what you’ve been talking about tonight in the way that we were just talking about with Edwards — a kind of Edwardsian, richly theological ministry — how can a young pastor act on this kind of vision? And how can a pastor who is already situated, perhaps middle aged, and doesn’t have a lot of opportunity to go and get further training or that sort of thing, how can those two groups come to embody this vision?

John Piper: What were the two groups again?

Owen Strachan: A young guy training for the ministry and an older pastor.

D.A. Carson: At the risk of being a smart aleck, read a great deal less on the internet and a great deal more books. Now, don’t misunderstand, I’m not knocking the internet. In The Gospel Coalition we’ve just pushed a big thing there, and it’s wonderful too, but it’s such a scrappy environment. You’re not learning to think, unless you’re downloading entire books from the internet and reading them on the screen. I have no objection to that. Believe it or not, I have a Kindle too, and I can read Saint Augustine on my Kindle. But at the same time, there’s a way of just collecting little bits and pieces here and there that don’t train you to think well. And in that connection you have to read and reread the Bible, but it needs to be read within the context of the history of the church, of historical theology, and of others who, believe it or not, have studied these texts before you. And it’s worth finding out what they have to say as well.

You don’t have to keep reinventing everything. You have to learn to find things for yourself, and your authority really must be the Word. You start and end there, but at the same time you must become informed by how others before you have wrestled with these things and they become your teachers and so on. That requires sustained thought. So in the context of pastoral ministry, reserve time in the study not just for preparing for the next sermon, but for reading beyond that. You just have to block out time for that. And if you’re going to be a technical scholar, then again, you have to reserve time for learning, for reading, for thinking, and so much more could be said. And beyond that also for praying and adoring and all the rest. But you have to reserve time for that and not just sacrifice everything to the urgent demand of the next email.

John Piper: Number one, when you go to school or even if you’re out of school, don’t choose classes, choose teachers. Find the teachers who do it and model it best and take as many classes as you can. It doesn’t matter what they teach. I’d say that about college and I’d say it about seminary. Don’t take classes, take teachers. Ask around, find out who is the thinker, the modeler.

Number two, not only don’t read the internet as much as books, read fewer books and read them with pencil in hand and read them very slowly and underline and write questions in the margin and say, “No, it doesn’t agree with page 22.” And then go to page 23 and argue. Get inside and think and argue with a book.

Number three, find a group of men, this may be the pastor who’s already out, and get together and read critically some book like that. And read Mortimer Adler’s How to Read a Book. No matter what age you are, if you haven’t read that book you should read it. It’s 60 years old as a book, and it will show you how to read. Most people do not know how to read. I would venture and say most people in this room do not know how to read because reading is an unbelievably non-passive, active affair when you do it. And we’ve been taught by teachers assigning us 12 books in a class not to read. We’ve been taught not to read. We think that moving through passages is reading. It’s not reading. Interacting so that you can restate an author’s thought and reconstruct his argument to his satisfaction and then give reasons you disagree.

There are different kinds of reasons you can give. You could say, “He was inadequate in the way he described. He was incomplete. He was illogical. He drew wrong inferences.” You need to learn the kinds of ways you can interact. Do the same thing then with the Bible. What I’m talking about is learning how to think and observe, think and observe. What you do is observe what’s there and think rightly about it. So the fetal pig and geometry, that’s what it’s about. Wherever you can find somebody to train you to do that, do it. Isaac Watts is mainly known for what? Hymns, but he wrote a primer on logic. Why would that be? Because you can’t understand the theology you build the hymns on unless you think rightly. So he was the poet and the logician.

Owen Strachan: Thank you. We have just a few minutes for texting questions. I’m going to get them up here and I’ll read them to you too.First questions, what are some of the biggest issues you think the church and evangelical scholars will need to deal with in the next 20 years? And let’s do a lightning round. Let’s do quick answers if we can.

John Piper: Islam, Christology, “Is Jesus the only way?” That’s where I’d start.

D.A. Carson: Continuing challenges in epistemology — that is, how do you know the truth, the place for revelation and understanding all of that.

John Piper: He is doing a big two volume thing on Scripture because even though he was instrumental a generation ago to write serious things on the authority and inspiration of Scripture, it needs to be done again because of how many people in new ways challenge the authority of Scripture. Every generation needs its big book on that. I was working on that. That’ll be there for 20 years to come probably.

D.A. Carson: We are not yet through the debates about justification and the exact place of substitutionary atonement in the structure of biblical thought. There’s going to be more. And that one comes again every generation as well in one fashion or another. You have to keep redoing that one. Add to that the doctrine of God, and that’s partly because of a whole lot of other things. But one of the most neglected doctrines I think in the evangelical world is the doctrine of God. We just haven’t spent enough time thinking that through holistically.

John Piper: Yeah. There are clusters of family issues in relation to public life and whether you will be allowed without going to jail to stand up in your pulpit and say that homosexuality is sin, or to spank your children, or to say, “My wife should submit to me.” There is this whole cluster of practical family things will become more volatile than they are now. You see what’s happening in Canada. You see what’s happening in Sweden and other places, and we’ll be there.

I’ve told people I will be in jail rather than not preach that it’s right to spank your children. I will not avoid preaching that in order to stay out of jail. I will not even use the phrase “so-called” gay marriage without putting the word “so-called” in front. It frustrates me that we have bought the phrase because there is no such thing as “so-called” gay marriage. It doesn’t exist in the universe. Why evangelicals would start using the term is a sellout. Stick the word “so-called” in front of it every time you use it because there is no such thing. That will be called hate speech, and it will be worthy of imprisonment around the corner.

D.A. Carson: And related to that are the pastoral, theological, personal, and definitional issues surrounding what tolerance is. And that is tied to some historical questions. There have been shifts in what tolerance is perceived to be, but it’s also tied to what you think the church’s relationship to culture should be. There is a nest of issues related to that where it’s going to be important to think very clearly . We’re being painted into a corner and being called intolerant in a very intolerant way. And yet people don’t see just how deeply ironic and tragic and even stupid that is. But nevertheless, that’s what’s happening and this has to be addressed I’m afraid.

John Piper: There’s one more. I think that the explosion of — I don’t want to just say contemporary worship music and contemporary worship forms (and our church would feel that way to most people) — very rock-oriented music. So almost everywhere in the world now that we have the same songs, whether or not the ethos generally associated with that on a Sunday morning can sustain the gravitas of the glory of God over the long haul. Whether it can hold it. It is possible. I mean, there are contemporary worship songs that draw out my heart into the bigness of God in a most marvelous way, but there is a kind of lowbrow, hip, cool, “y’all come”, family, chatty way of doing worship today.

The question is, if that becomes more and more prevalent, what becomes of the majesty of God in this Book? It’s very difficult to maintain a sense of the bigness and the majesty of God if everything about the service is calculated to be chummy and close and warm and touchy and feely and “y’all come”. Something has to break there. And I pray what will happen is that all the best of contemporary worship music and all the best of the weightiness of glory will move into just forms so that people your age (20 somethings) will feel that sooner rather than later. And you won’t overreact against contemporary forms and say, “We are going to go liturgical and do old hymns and organ and try to do it all old again.” But rather you’ll say, “We’ve got to find a way so that from the beginning to the end of this service, there’s a weightiness about it, a seriousness.”

Because that corresponds then to what the word will say and who he is and what hell really signifies and how glorious the cross is. All those realities just don’t fit in talk shows. They don’t. If you try to do your little talk show down there as you welcome people and just make this as street-like as possible, there are realities, most of them in the Bible, just don’t fit there. They don’t. They get so dumbed down that the weight of hell and the horror of judgment and the glory of the cross are lost. People lose their capacity for all.

D.A. Carson: May I add a footnote, a sentence?

John Piper: You’re asking me? Yes, you may.

D.A. Carson: Oh, thank you. Thank you.

John Piper: I am 63 after all.

D.A. Carson: Yeah, that’s right. You got to respect your elders. I mean, what can you say? I agree with that. Absolutely, 100 percent. I think that practically in the local church, one of the questions that those who are responsible for sung worship can ask themselves is not just, “What is Orthodox?” but, “What is best?” There are lots and lots and lots of songs that are individually acceptable, but learn to choose what’s best, not what passes a mere orthodoxy test. That will already change everything. And then start looking around for certain writers. Two weeks ago I was in England and I sat down again with both Stuart Townsend and Keith and Kristyn Getty, they are friends. Keith and his wife, believe it or not, spent part of their honeymoon in our home. I mean, how stupid can you get? But nevertheless, they did.

And you know what these people do? Every time some of us get together at some of these things, they sit down and they ask questions like, “What doctrines are we not hitting adequately in our hymns? What should the tone be?” I mean, there are some people out there that are doing this well. The Stuart Townsend and the Keith Gettys of this world are just a cut above almost all the other contemporary hymn writers. Pray for more of those. There are some people making the right moves. I’m encouraged by that.

Owen Strachan: All right. Wow, that was quick indeed.

John Piper: May I encourage you to exercise authority over us?

Owen Strachan: Can we do one last question?

John Piper: You may.

Owen Strachan: All right. I guess that wasn’t a good exercise of authority, I asked you.

D.A. Carson: No, no. He cannot not exercise authority.

Owen Strachan: Here’s the last question and then we’re going to have Jackson Crumb come up and close the night for us. The question is, all things being equal outside of scholarship, does scholarship bring a deeper intimacy and love for God than those who lack scholarship? It’s a good question to close on. Does scholarship bring a deeper intimacy and love for God than those who lack scholarship?

John Piper: All things being equal is a very crucial qualifier. And if scholarship means right thinking and right observation, the answer is clearly yes.

D.A. Carson: Exactly. But if scholarship means something like being an academic without reference to whether or not your subject matter is right, your disciplines are right, your focus is right, your motives are right, then the answer is that it can be merely deceptive and lead you straight to hell.

Owen Strachan: Amen. Let’s applaud our speakers.