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This book is a must read for pastors, teachers,
and anyone else who loves Calvinism and wants to communicate it to others. Some
have caricatured Calvinism so badly that having meaningful dialogue about it is
often difficult. Those of us who genuinely love our Calvinistic theology are our
own worst enemy because in our desire and enthusiasm we do not always use good
judgment in how we communicate that truth to others.
Sadly, the message people hear is often one of
irrelevance or harsh dogma or unbending compassion. It often suggests a focus
only on the mind and not the heart; hence Calvinism does not seem to have much
curb appeal. Mouw challenges our thinking about what our life and methods
communicate to those around us, and it is not always winsome and positive. You
will have to read the book, especially the opening chapter "Hard Core." The
chapter title is from a 1980s movie in which a father, in a desperate search for
his daughter, teams up with one of her acquaintances, who is a prostitute. In
one scene the two are in the Las Vegas airport and he is trying to tell this
young wayward woman about the five points of Calvinism. You can guess the
results.
Mouw challenges us not to abandon our Calvinistic
heritage, but also not to demean it by being insensitive in how we express its
truth to others. I think this is an excellent book to read in tandum with the Os
Guinness book also reviewed in this issue. Mouw has some fresh thoughts on the
sovereignty of God, the five points of Calvinism, and how to and not to
communicate those truths. Like this reviewer, Mouw has a strong appreciation for
the Dutch Calvinist Abraham Kuyper. He uses him as a model of how we can learn
how to express our faith in a life-transforming, kingdom oriented fashion.
Mouw writes, "I see these folks as having been
working with good Kuyperian instincts. They knew in their heart of hearts that
God wanted them to serve him in the places where they spent their day-to-day
lives. But the theology they were hearing in their churches and in other places
where they were learning about the Christian life was not helping them
understand the sense of calling they were experiencing in their hearts." He
claims the kind of framework we need for serving the Lord is to be "worldly
Christians" in the sense that every part of their lives are to be lived for the
glory of God.
Mouw, like Guinness, urges us to be faithful, but
not triumphalists. Instead we need a clearer, kinder, and more patient
Calvinism, not an overbearing putting someone down version. It is no surprise
that Mouw reminds us that people are lonely, hungry, lacking satisfaction and
looking for answers. We as Calvinists have the answers, but we don't always
depict it in a compelling way. He even says, " Frankly, I'm not sure TULIP (the
five points of Calvinism) is ever a good topic for casual conversations with
people who are not Calvinsits." Sometimes, he maintains, people do not need a
lesson in theology but a message from God who speaks in soft and tender tones.
They need to here from the one who invites us to belong to him and experience
his love and grace in our lives every day. Mouw also says, "Humility is an
important virtue to cultivate in dealing with the basic issues of the Christian
life. And when it comes to ethical issues, Calvinists do well to cultivate this
virtue in large doses."
Read this book. You will read it again and pass
it on to those with whom you would want to share your Calvinistic understanding
of the Christian faith. While Os Guinness reminds us that the message is
sovereign not the audience, Mouw echoes that thought with the challenge
- Charles Dunahoo, CEP Coordinator
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