Some interesting happenings.

Not sure how many people are still hanging around here or hitting this place up on the RSS feeds, however I thought those who do would be interested in some happenings that I came across last week.  Canon Press has decided to do what many other publishers do in order to stir interest in future releases and have people who enjoy blogging get a chance to read and review an early copy.  Turns out they are doing this with one of my favorites authors, Douglas Wilson.  I eagerly contacted the publisher and asked to be put on the list to receive the copies.  The incredibly controversial author within reformed circles will be releasing two new books in the coming months, the first being A Primer on Worship and Reformation.  Here is what Canon Press has to say about this release…

A Primer on Worship and Reformation:
Recovering the High Church Puritan

You Say You Want a Reformation?

It is no secret that our world desperately needs change. Politicians know this and use it to collect votes. Journalists exploit it to sell newspapers and magazines. Advertisers, to sell everything else. Each of these groups (and countless others) spend their lives working to convince others that they hold the key to a better country, a better life, a better future.

But what exactly is this change we all long for? And how can it ever come about?

A Primer on Worship and Reformation proposes that true change begins, not with a process or an idea, but through faithful worship. To witness true global change—true reformation—we must first pray the Lord that we would see worship at the center of life. The truth is that when the Word is faithfully preached, even the gates of hell tremble. When the Psalms are sung, the meek inherit the earth. When the church celebrates at the Lord’s Table, those who mourn are comforted.

If we learn these lessons and believe them to be true, we will find that through renewed worship God brings change to every facet of our lives.

Following this in December will be another new one entitled,  Heaven Misplaced: Christ’s Kingdom on Earth, which is Wilson’s small book on what it means to have an optimistic eschatological viewpoint.  This book is very interesting because I am one that tends to stradle the amil/postmil fence.  I understand (for the most part) both sides and look forward to this shaping more about what I believe about the things to come. 

The death of a board…

Well I made the executive decision of removing the board that was linked to this site since nobody had posted on it since late February.  I am not too torn up over it since the fallout that occurred last year.  But, if you like, take a moment of silence in remembrance of what it once was, I place where 8 - 10 overly cynical folks used to post.  It is gone, and probably for the best.

In other news, I recently finished up Keller’s The Reason for God and Trueman’s The Wages of Spin.  Both were excellent reads and come highly recommended.  I was impresed enough with Trueman’s book that I will purchase his latest, The Minority Report, soon.  how is everyone else out there in the blog world?

“Free the Hops”

“Free the Hops” Calls for Birmingham Boycott of Anheuser-Busch Products

(from beeradvocate.com)

Alabama Craft Beer Group Calls for Birmingham Boycott of Anheuser-Busch Products

“Free the Hops” consumer group launches boycott in response to Budweiser distributor’s opposition to pro-craft beer legislation

(Birmingham, Alabama) – Free The Hops / Alabamians For Specialty Beer, a grassroots consumer group working to change legislation banning most craft beer from Alabama, is calling for a consumer boycott of Anheuser-Busch products sold in the Birmingham/Jefferson County area.

The group’s president, Stuart Carter, says his group is calling for the boycott because of the anti-craft beer lobbying efforts of Birmingham Budweiser and the distributor’s vice president, Pat Lynch.

Lynch, Carter says, has been a major opponent of local and state legislation which could legalize gourmet beer, typically higher-strength, in Alabama.

Free The Hops has been working for three years to change the current Alabama law that limits beer to no more the 6% alcohol by volume (ABV). This ABV ceiling means the majority of America’s finest craft beers, and many of the world’s best imported beers, cannot be sold in the state.

The Free The Hops organization is seeking to raise the state’s ABV limit for beer to 14.9%.

Lynch’s lobbying efforts against the local Jefferson county bill for the higher ABV limit led to the Free The Hops supported legislation (HB-728) failing last year, Carter says.

Free the Hops has called for a boycott of all Budweiser products sold in the Jefferson County/Birmingham area.

“The members of Free The Hops,” Carter says, “will no longer purchase or consume any Budweiser products in Jefferson County. And we urge all of our non-member supporters to do the same.”

“I would also like to see those retailers, restaurants, and bars that support our cause stop selling Budweiser products.” Carter adds.

Carter says the boycott will remain in effect “until Birmingham Budweiser and Pat Lynch publicly reverse their policy of opposition, and actively start supporting the sale of gourmet beer in Jefferson County and throughout Alabama.”

For the past two years, Anheuser-Busch has been conducting a high-profile, national ad campaign called “Here’s to Beer” which promotes craft beer. The company has also been producing a line of craft-style beers, in an effort to capitalize on the steadily increasing popularity of craft beer in the US.

According to the Boulder, Colorado-based Brewers Association, craft beer sales have risen by 11% by volume in the first half of 2007, and now account for more than 5% of beer sales, while mainstream domestic beer sales have been flat or declining.

“Free the Hops,” Carter says, “wants Birmingham Budweiser and Pat Lynch to embrace that same spirit of the A-B campaign: Here’s to Beer—all beer.”

FTH was founded three years ago as a citizen-driven movement solely committed to removing Alabama’s artificial and antiquated limits on the sale of gourmet beer.

Alabama is one of only three states in the US that limit alcohol by volume for beer to only 6%. It is the only state that limits beer containers to a size of no more than 1 US pint (16 ounces).

For more information contact Stuart Carter at stuart@freethehops.org. Read about the efforts of Free the Hops at http://freethehops.org

The Altar of Cynicism

Thanks to Challies for pointing out this article on TableTalk.  I know that I struggle with this and I am sure there are readers out there that do as well.

The Altar of Cynicism

by John Sartelle

People lose their souls to many gods. There are the popular gods like money, sex, and power. But there is one unusual god to which men lose their souls, and maybe that god has seduced more people than any of the more famous or obvious gods that live in our hearts. Cynicism is the god of the thinking person. Cynicism at first sight is not attractive, and thus, it does not seem seductive or powerful. 

It was the god with whom Solomon battled from the beginning of Ecclesiastes to the end. Oh, he spoke of living for money, sex, and power, but what did he conclude? He concluded that they were void of meaning. They were carafes that looked like they were filled with wine, but they contained only colored water. Solomon surveyed all the gods. In fact, he was intimate with each of them. But the one that came the nearest to owning his soul was cynicism. He looked at everything — his money, his power, his work, his brilliance, even his relationships with his wives and friends. He concluded that all of these were useless. There was nothing or no one who delivered what they seemed to promise. These gods that he had loved with all his might went back on their word; they double-crossed his soul. Thus: “Vanity of vanities…all is vanity” (Eccl. 12:8). The Hebrew word translated vanity means empty, transitory, unsatisfactory. His gods were empty and could not satisfy. They could not be trusted.

Last year I read a very powerful book in which the protagonist had everything (money, power, prestige, family, sex), but he “woke up” to discover how empty his life was. So he set out to find a reality that could be trusted. Along the way his wife, parents, and friends all proved unfaithful and untrustworthy. In the end, he sailed out of the harbor into the ocean alone on his boat with no direction. He had lost his soul to cynicism. Every god, every man, every woman, every institution he trusted let him down. But then he, too, had proved to be unfaithful and untrustworthy, because like all of us he had lied, he had failed to deliver when others trusted him. He, himself, had not been faithful. In the end he became cynical. He kept saying, “To hell with it, to hell with it all.”

This is where cynicism takes hold: with our realization that nothing or no one can be totally trusted, and we can’t even point the finger of accusation at others because we ourselves cannot be trusted. We must number ourselves among the unfaithful and untrustworthy. Cynicism is the temple to which we finally come after stopovers at the houses of all the other gods. It is the temple at the end of “temple row.” 

At the last, Solomon was saved from his cynicism. Ecclesiastes did not end like the book I read. Solomon did not sail out of the harbor into an endless ocean of emptiness. He did not end his story with the words, “To hell with it, to hell with it all.” He came to the sanctuary of a changeless God — a God who made incredible promises of grace and then kept His word. He came to a God who forgave unfaithful and untrustworthy people. He came to a God who said, “I will be faithful to my covenant with you. I will be faithful even though you have not been faithful to Me.”

Don’t expect more from your deities than they are able to deliver. Money will fail you, pleasure will fail you, power will fail you; friends, wives, husbands, fathers, mothers, and children will fail you. Solomon was right about that. And when they do, many of us are devastated. In our bitterness and resentment we go to the temple of cynicism. But there is a gospel for cynics. There is a gospel that says to us, “Of course, all of these will fail you. Of course, they are unfaithful and untrustworthy, and so are you.” So, in the words of Solomon, let’s hear “the conclusion of the matter.”

Don’t give up; there is one more temple. It is the temple that welcomes the unfaithful and untrustworthy. Above the door are words of grace: “Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and he who has no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labor for that which does not satisfy?” (Isa. 55:1–2).

The cynic comes to this temple and finally finds One who will not betray him and who will never fail him. This God has declared that the sun and moon will fall from the sky before His word and promises can be broken. He went to the extreme of sacrificing His own Son to keep His promise, to be faithful to His oath of justice. He has never lied. He has never broken His word. Here is One who is trustworthy. And surprisingly, He has invited the unfaithful and untrustworthy to come and live with Him. The way His creation treated Him, we would expect Him to be cynical. Yet, He speaks grace to the very people who failed Him. Former cynics no longer go about every day saying, “Vanity of vanities…everything is vanity.” They are singing a new song, one about an amazing grace that saves wretches.

And now a very strange thing has happened. These former cynics now give the grace they received to those who have been unfaithful and untrustworthy to them.

AAPC votes to leave the PCA

In an unfortunate move, the Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church has voted to leave the PCA and be accepted in to the CREC under Randy Booth’s church.  Green Baggins reports:

I have just received confirmation in an email message from Douglas Wilson (and I have his permission to post this), that Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church has voted simultaneously to leave the PCA and to join the CREC. I understand that Doug will have a post on this in just a few minutes.

As well as Doug Wilson’s blog:

Yesterday the congregation of Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church voted (without dissent) to leave the PCA. They also voted to have Steve Wilkins continue as their pastor, and to approach the CREC for membership. They have been adopted as a mission church of Grace Covenant Church in Nacogdoches, Texas, pastored by Randy Booth. Steve was a member in good standing of the Louisiana Presbytery and consequently may transfer his membership according to the PCA BCO (38-3a), with the presbytery simply recording the action. The Louisiana Presbytery has been formally notified of all this. We welcome Auburn Avenue into our fellowship of churches with an odd mixture of grief and joy.

I find this very disappointing, for two reasons.  First of all, the PCA has to deal with this.  I do not believe that the motion that was passed at this past GA was good enough for future resolutions.  It needs to be fleshed out in a way that better solidifies why the PCA believes them (the FV) to be out of accord with the WCF.  And secondly, what kind of message does this send to AAPC members?  I liken this whole situation to someone being brought under church discipline.  The only example that they have given is on of cut and run, which is what happens in most cases of church discipline.  So now every AAPC member that voted to leave should never be scrutinized by their session if they ever come under discipline and decide to up and change churches before anything is done to be cleared of the charges or brought unto repentance.

Yazoo Pale Ale

Yazoo Pale Ale (brewed in
Nashville, TN) has the fresh
citrus touch and tartness of
Sierra Nevada, with this
difference: where Sierra Nevada
is crisp, Yazoo Pale Ale is
smooth. This beer would do
well as a session beer. I only
wish that I didn’t have to wait
so long between enjoyments
of this brew.

This is a great beer.

Budweiser…

One of the folks at the derekwebb.com message board ( a guy named Kevin) posted the following in a thread asking advice for a soon-to-be 21 year old on what he should start with when it came to alcohol.

Budweiser: Having this as your first beer is like losing your virginity to Margaret Thatcher.  Same goes for MGD, Michelob, Coors etc…

Bible Reading Plan

A couple of us here at Theology Pub are following along with M’Cheyne’s Bible reading plan. If you following along with daily readings you will end up reading through the Old Testament once and the Psalms and the New Testament twice. Following the link above and get started. It is never too late and has been a great blessing for people like me who are horrible at making sure they are in the Scriptures daily.

Happy New Year…

… only 17 days late.  Well as you can see I got rid of the news-style theme here and went with a more simple, three column based theme.  We will see if any of us actually start posting on this main page.  I might try and blog my way through Leithart’s latest “Solomon Among the Postmoderns” in order to get a little content and discussion going.  Does anyone know if there is a way to set a blog up so that it can automatically post a message to message board for discussion?  That would be pretty nifty!

Hopefully the mighty ’sir omer’ will finally decide to get off his rump and start making some posts over in his corner of the pub.  We definitely need some ideas from the Baptist perspective here :)  Also, you will notice in the blogroll a link to our good friend Craig, who runs the Reformed Parishioner.  You may have seen him on the front of the ESV Bible blog with his post about Bible Before Blogdom.  If you have been sticking around, please post a comment and say hey.  Even if there are none, I will stick around and try to build the community a little more.

Today In History… (1933)

REJOICE!!!!