The Society for the Advancement of Ecclesiological Theology

  • Home
  • About
    • History
    • Leadership
    • Director Interview
  • SAET Fellowships
    • First Fellowship
    • Second Fellowship
    • Fellowship Symposia
    • Apply to a SAET Fellowship
  • Contact
  • RSS
  • Subscribe
  • February 16, 2010 by Gerald Hiestand

    Bargerhuff, The Love that Rescues

    Eric Bargerhuff, one of our SAET Fellows, has just announced the release of his book on church discipline, Love That Rescues: God’s Fatherly Love in the Practice of Church Discipline (Wipf and Stock).  Every pastor needs to think carefully and biblically about this important topic. I encourage you to pick up a copy. The book’s description is below:

    In an age where “church discipline” has fallen out of favor in the context of many churches, Eric Bargerhuff calls the church to a deeper understanding of its nature and purpose as an expression of God’s “fatherly love” towards his people. As a biblically mandated activity instituted by Christ himself in Matthew 18, church discipline is an essential practice of any faithful church that is committed to sharing the Gospel and making disciples.

    Tackling some of the false notions and assumptions surrounding church discipline, Bargerhuff sets forth a historical, biblical, theological, and practical position that centers its identity and purpose on a proper understanding of the cross of Christ. Since the punitive wrath of God was poured out for sin on the cross of Jesus Christ (a penal substitutionary atonement), it is therefore necessary to reject the notion that church discipline is “punishment,” but rather it should be seen as God’s hand of forgiveness and grace extended for the purpose of restoring, reconciling, and rescuing one of his own, a “sheep that has gone astray.” It is to be regarded as God’s love in the actions of a forgiven and forgiving community.

    Endorsements:

    “Here is a biblically rooted, theologically formed, and long overdue case for conceiving church discipline as a loving practice of the church. Bargerhuff flies against the prevailing cultural winds that lead most of us, when we hear mention of ‘discipline,’ to complete the phrase with the other part of Foucault’s title: ‘. . . and punish.’ The evangelical church—and not only the evangelical!—desperately needs to recover this neglected church practice as an important means of edification, if not of grace itself.”

    —Kevin J. Vanhoozer
    Blanchard Professor of Theology
    Wheaton College Graduate School

    “This is a wise, insightful, practical, and theologically rich study of the teaching of the entire Bible about God’s loving discipline of his children. It will challenge every church to exercise discipline according to Scripture, lest the church itself fall under God’s discipline through unfaithfulness.”

    —Wayne Grudem
    Research Professor of Theology and Biblical Studies
    Phoenix Seminary, Phoenix, Arizona

    “Viewing [church discipline] as an incarnate expression of God’s fatherly discipline, Bargerhuff helps us understand church discipline as a necessary part of being a forgiven and forgiving community. I recommend this book very highly to all who long to see the church flesh out God’s dual commitment to ethical and doctrinal purity and to his forgiving, restoring, rescuing love.”

    —Steven C. Roy
    Associate Professor of Pastoral Theology
    Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

    Categories: Eric Bargerhuff | SAET Fellow Publications

    Leave A Comment

Welcome

doorWelcome to saet-online.org, the online home of The Society for the Advancement of Ecclesial Theology (SAET). The SAET is an organization dedicated to assisting pastor-theologians in producing biblical and theological scholarship for the renewal of orthodox theology, for the renewal of the church. Operating within the historic evangelical tradition, the SAET believes the contemporary bifurcation between the pastoral calling and theological formation has resulted in the loss of a distinctly ecclesial voice in orthodox theology. The SAET seeks to resurrect this voice...(continue reading)

SAET Bloggers

  • Bryan Loritts
  • David Rudolph (IM)
  • David Rudolph (JAB)
  • Eric Bargerhuff
  • Gerald Hiestand
  • Jason Hood
  • Jay Thomas
  • Joel Willitts
  • Matthew Mason
  • Owen Strachan
  • Stephen Witmer
  • Todd Wilson

Recent Posts

  • David Rudolph on “Paul’s Rule in All the Churches”
  • Stephen Witmer on Sin
  • Eternity Bible College Now Offering Online Classes
  • Ecclesial Theology and SBL
  • Pastor-Theologians and Academic Theologians: Toward a Healthy Division of Labor, Part 3
  • Ecclesial Theology as the Foundation of Popular Theology
  • Spring Gathering of the Second Fellowship
  • Piper on PhD’s
  • Matt Kim, New SAET Fellow
  • Dr. Jeff Hubing, New SAET Fellow

Article Categories

  • Academic Theology (12)
  • Anglican (1)
  • Articles (1)
  • Book Review (6)
  • Carl Trueman (1)
  • Church (2)
  • Church History (1)
  • Commentaries (1)
  • Conference (1)
  • David Rudolph (1)
  • Ecclesial Theologian (4)
  • Ecclesial Theology (29)
  • Ecumenism (1)
  • Eric Bargerhuff (1)
  • Evangelicalism (2)
  • First Fellowship (2)
  • George Marsden (1)
  • Historical Method (1)
  • Jeff Hubing (1)
  • Joel Lawrence (1)
  • John Piper (3)
  • John Webster (2)
  • Jonathan Edwards (1)
  • Kevin Vanhoozer (2)
  • Martin Hengel (1)
  • Matt Kim (1)
  • Pastor Ministry (1)
  • Pastor-theologian (22)
  • Popular Theology (2)
  • Preston Sprinkle (2)
  • Resurrection (3)
  • Robert Jenson (2)
  • SAET Fellow Publications (5)
  • SAET Fellowship (6)
  • SBL (1)
  • Second Fellowship (4)
  • Soteriology (1)
  • Stephen Witmer (1)
  • Symposium (4)
  • Systematic Theology (2)
  • The SAET (4)
  • Theology (2)
  • Tom Wright (4)
  • Uncategorized (7)
  • Wider Theologians (3)

Copyright 2010 The Society for the Advancement of Ecclesial Theology | Website Design by 343design | Admin