May 8, 2008 Posted by David N
closeAuthor: David N
Name:
Email: dvnilsen@gmail.com
Site: http://reasonfromscripture.blogspot.com
About: In 2003 I graduated from high school with no set direction for my life. I spent a year in Iowa before returning to California to attend Junior College. I changed majors 3 times; from Physics to Business to Film (as you can see, no direction). I was a Christian, attending church regularly, but furthering the cause of Christ in this fallen world was not a high priority.
In 2005 I picked up an issue of TableTalk magazine, and I was re-introduced to the work of R. C. Sproul (whom I had read once in high school). Later that year, while taking a biology class with an ardent atheist professor, I picked up a copy of Lee Strobel's "The Case For A Creator." In the Fall of 2006 I came to Biola University and was introduced to the works of J. P. Moreland and John Mark Reynolds. My fate was sealed.
Just a few years ago, I was passionless. Now I have two passions: Studying the Word of God and engaging in the task of Apologetics. 1 Peter 3:15 exhorts all Christians to be ready to give an answer for the hope that we have. My goal is to be able to give my answer articulately and powerfully, but even more importantly, in love. There are many purposes for apologetics, but by far the most important is the opening of minds and the softening of hearts for the work of the Holy Spirit. If we don't care about and pray for those with whom we engage in apologetics, we fail to fulfill this purpose. As a wise man once said, "Take a stand for the Truth, but do it in love fool!"
Education Info:
--Currently: M.A. in Historical Theology student, Westminster Seminary California
--2008: B.A. in Philosophy, Biola University
--2006: A.A. in Liberal Arts, Palomar CollegeSee Authors Posts (75)
When it comes to the gender debate, we must always keep sight of the Biblical picture of leadership. Egalitarians frequently argue that our focus should not be on claiming our rights to authority over others, and I couldn’t agree more. They argue that we should focus on serving one another, and again I couldn’t agree more. But something that egalitarians would do well to remember is that true Biblical leadership is nothing more than the ultimate form of servanthood.
Christ has all power and authority and dominion over all the earth, and yet He humbled himself more than any human being possibly could. The same is true for those who are called to lead in Christ’s church. The powerful description of the way in which a husband is to love his wife (Ephesians 5) does not reveal some sort of egalitarian model of marriage, rather it reinforces the Biblical picture of true, Christ-like leadership. For a husband to take on the role of head of his wife is for him to give up his own desires for her sake. It is for him to always put her first, to always think of her before himself, and ultimately to give up his whole life for her (figuratively as well as in reality). This is not a command to “mutually submit.” Far from it. This is a command to be a true Christian leader, as Christ was, and is, and ever will be.
Related posts:
- Defining Gender Roles
- The case for church membership
- Interview with Mary Kassian - Part II
- Worshiping as the Body of Christ
- Presidential Debate: Who’s Responsible for the Financial Crisis?
- EFBT 1: A Summary of the Complementarian Position
Posted in David's Posts, Gender Issues, Main Page, Theology
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