Stephen Jackson on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Sam Freney on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Marty Foord on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Dianne Howard on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Mike Bull on Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia
The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel! by Tony Payne (4 comments). Regular Sola Panel readers will no doubt have detected a little slowness and quietness over the past six weeks or so. … more
Kids’ culture watch spot: Facing fear by Gordon Cheng (3 comments). By popular demand (two people asked), here is my next script for a culture watch spot I did with the kids … more
Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia by Gordon Cheng (1 comment). It's a Sunday as I write this, and I'm speaking on Daniel 2 and 7 later this morning at a friend's … more
A constituent on same-sex marriage by Sandy Grant (34 comments). Last year, the Australian Parliament agreed that its Members of Parliament (MPs) should seek the … more
A tribute to John Stott by Sandy Grant (2 comments). Friends, I'm not ashamed to say I shed a tear when I opened up my computer on Thursday morning to read … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 3): On giants’ shoulders by Scott Newling (26 comments). This is the third post in this series; you can read part one, and more
Bible reading with kids by Sandy Grant (0 comments). I was asked for recommendations for resources that would encourage parents to read the Bible with their kids, especially … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 2): Stepping aside (not out) so others can step up (not in) by Scott Newling (3 comments). This is the second post in this series; you can read the first post, Unassuming … more
One more sip of the coffee by Tony Payne (8 comments). Sandy Grant is a man of integrity. Back in the early days of Sola Panel, I wrote a post … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 1): Unassuming generations by Scott Newling (30 comments). There is a model of ‘intergenerational theological decline’ that has been doing the rounds of late, and perhaps you … more
Paul is one of the Staff Editors at Matthias Media. He is married to Cathy and has three fantastic kids. He loves student ministry, reading, writing music and playing the saxophone, and is looking forward to meeting Jesus face to face.
Yes, I agree. A message of life and death delivered with a deadpan manner is quite disconcerting…
Thanks for picking up the stuff on Greek rhetoric, makes me want to read more about it. Augustine mentioned stuff about being taught rhetoric (& teaching it?), but from memory he counted as next to worthless compared to the gospel - or maybe I’m confusing that with Paul in 1 Cor 2.
I suppose the word appropriate for each of the 3 elements is the key.
Thanks for that Grimmo!
Thought provoking stuff…just goes to show we need to spend more time being affected by God’s word, before we preach/teach/tell others…
Akos
P.S. I won’t be nearly so offended next time someone labels my sermon ‘pathetic’
Thanks Paul. Jonathan Edwards aptly captures the necessary relationship between the emotions (affections) and preaching:
“I should think myself in the way of my duty to raise the affections of my hearers as high as possibly I can, provided that they are affected with nothing but truth, and with affections that are not disagreeable to the nature of what they are affected with.”
Doug Wilson uses a quote from C. S. Lewis to promote the practice of preaching to the whole man, or “preaching to the chest.”
I hope you don’t mind me linking to it. It offers a solution to the imbalances we are prone to.
http://www.bullartistry.com.au/wp/2009/04/08/preaching-to-the-chest/
“...preaching to the chest addresses the whole man. It does not exclude the truths he must affirm, and it does not exclude how he feels about them. It is the place where everything intersects.”
Hey Mike,
Love the link. It’s a great little piece. Thanks.
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