What Pietists Can Learn from the Anabaptist Vision

Today we come to the end of a series that has looked at 20th century (neo)Anabaptist critiques of Pietism, starting with Harold Bender‘s influential “Anabaptist Vision” speech and Robert Friedmann‘s famously anti-Pietist “thesis.” After a pause to sum up that critique and look at its continuing influence, we examined how revisionist and post-revisionist Anabaptist historians … More What Pietists Can Learn from the Anabaptist Vision

The Pietist Impulse: Modernity

As we’ve already heard from Roger Olson, Pietism is often caricatured as being anti-intellectual, and Pietists as being so concerned to avoid head-centered “dead orthodoxy” that they substitute heart-centered emotional subjectivism. In part three of our series previewing chapters in our new book, The Pietist Impulse in Christianity, we find that tension, but more importantly, … More The Pietist Impulse: Modernity

The Week in Preview

7/29/11 – My family is spending a long weekend attending a wedding in Michigan, so there might not be much posted here until the middle of next week: more previews of The Pietist Impulse in Christianity, the conclusion to our series on Anabaptist critiques of Pietism, and perhaps something more on the awful events in … More The Week in Preview

John Stott

7/27/11 – Peace be to the memory of the Rev. Dr. John R. W. Stott, chief author of the Lausanne Covenant and the most important and widely respected evangelical leader in the world (according to the only man who could challenge him for that title, Billy Graham). I’ll collect several links for my Saturday recap, … More John Stott