Into the Far Country

Jesus Christ has gone into the far country in our stead, to bring us home to God!

April 20, 2019 · 1 min · joshuapsteele

What are your "must-own" biblical and theological studies reference works?

It just happened again. I had to consult “BDAG,” A Greek–English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (3rd ed.). I don’t own a copy, so every time I have to consult BDAG I think “I really should buy this.” But for the past decade or so, primarily because of BDAG’s cost ($150 on Logos, $130 used on Amazon, $165 new on Amazon) I’ve held off. Nevertheless, I’m seeking to build my “must-have” personal reference library to sustain a ministry as a pastor theologian....

April 10, 2019 · 2 min · joshuapsteele

There's more than one kind of "priesthood" in the New Testament

Just came across this article in New Blackfriars, and it looks helpful, especially in the context of Anglican debates about women’s ordination. Title: “The Four Types of Priesthood in the New Testament: On Avoiding Confusions about What ‘Priesthood’ Means” Author: Geoffrey Turner Abstract: Christian discourse tends to treat the concept of ‘priesthood’ univocally, so that ordained priests are seen to share the priesthood of Christ. But a careful reading of Hebrews shows clearly that the priesthood of Christ is unique to him....

February 12, 2019 · 2 min · joshuapsteele

What's the relationship between biblical and systematic/dogmatic theology?

This is the question we’re considering this week in our doctoral seminar on biblical and theological integration. Two of us are theologians and the other four are bible scholars. Should be interesting! (Note: we’ll have to save the difference(s) between systematic, historical, and dogmatic theology for another post!) Here are the articles we were assigned to read for this week: D.A. Carson, “Systematic Theology and Biblical Theology” in the New Dictionary of Biblical Theology, pp....

January 23, 2019 · 2 min · joshuapsteele

A Prayer of Confession

To start off the semester the other day, we prayed this prayer of confession together as a class. The professor didn’t remember where the prayer was from, so I tracked it down online. According to Justin Taylor, it was written by Bob Kauflin. Holy and righteous God, we confess that like Isaiah, we are a people of unclean lips. But it is not only unclean lips we possess. We are people with unclean hands and unclean hearts....

January 15, 2019 · 3 min · joshuapsteele

Go to Sleep and Have Some Kids: What the Bible (Psalm 127) Says about Productivity

Personal Productivity in Psalm 127 I love Psalm 127. Not because it makes me feel great, necessarily, but because it hits me like a ton of bricks whenever I read it (like I did last night, during evening prayer). Here’s how the Psalm opens: Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the guards stand watch in vain. I don’t know about you, but it’s easy for me to think that my success or lack thereof completely depends on me and the intensity of my efforts....

February 28, 2018 · 4 min · joshuapsteele

3 Questions to Ask When You Study the Bible (Plus a Worksheet!)

The Problem: Studying the Bible can Quickly Feel Overwhelming Right? Even with helpful books out there like How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth (that’s an affiliate link, by the way, meaning that I get a small commission at no cost to you if you end up buying the book), there are still so many potential questions to ask of any biblical text when we study it. How are we supposed to keep questions of authorship, genre, meaning, application, etc....

January 31, 2018 · 4 min · joshuapsteele

The Hermeneutical Implications of Scripture's Theological Location

INTRODUCTION Theological hermeneutics – human understanding and interpretation in light of the identity and acts of the triune God – faces two problematic questions that, I believe, every biblical and/or theological scholar must be prepared to address. First, should the Bible be read in some special sense as divine revelation, or should we read the Bible like any other text? And second, should biblical and theological studies be one discipline, or two?...

December 9, 2017 · 31 min · joshuapsteele

It is Finished! So, Get to Work! – A Sermon on the Ascension

The following is an “It is Finished” sermon preached on Ascension Sunday, 2017. You can listen to the sermon here: https://joshuapsteele.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/05-28-17JS.mp3 GOODBYES SUCK You know, if there’s one thing I hate, it’s goodbyes. Anyone else here hate goodbyes? Yeah, and the fact that I hate them so much means I’m not really very good at goodbyes. Sometimes I get awkward and silent. Sometimes I get awkward and really chatty! Heck, sometimes I get awkward and I make poor choices, like the one time when I was getting ready to say goodbye to my family when they dropped me off at college....

June 13, 2017 · 14 min · joshuapsteele

The Lasting Supper – Luke 22:14-30

https://joshuapsteele.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/04-13-17JS.mp3 There is something special about last meals, isn’t there? I’d like to show you a series of photographs. These photographs, except for the last one – which I added, are from a piece called “No Seconds,” and they were put together by Henry Hargreaves. I don’t want to belabor the artwork with my commentary, so I’ll give you a few seconds to take each slide in. [![](https://joshuapsteele.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Slide2-150x150.jpg)](https://joshuapsteele.com/maundy-thursday-sermon-the-lasting-supper-luke-2214-30/slide2/) [![](https://joshuapsteele.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Slide11-150x150.jpg)](https://joshuapsteele.com/maundy-thursday-sermon-the-lasting-supper-luke-2214-30/slide11/) [![](https://joshuapsteele.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Slide10-150x150.jpg)](https://joshuapsteele.com/maundy-thursday-sermon-the-lasting-supper-luke-2214-30/slide10/) [!...

April 13, 2017 · 11 min · joshuapsteele