Full Text for CTM Book Review 16-3 (Text)

Qtnnrn~itt q nlngira 4nttt111y Concinlling LEHRE UNO W EHRE MAGAZIN FUER E v.-LuTH. H OMIl.ETIK THEOLOGICAL QUARTERLY.THEOLOGICAL MONTHLY Vol. XVI March, 1945 No.3 CONTENTS Page The Lord's Prayer, the Pastor's Prayer. G. H. Smukal ......... _._ ...... 145 I Believe in the Resurrection of the Body. w. F. Beck ...... _ ......... _ ... 153 Sermon Study on Heb.12:1-6. Theo. Laetseh ........... _ .......... _ ..... _ ......... 169 A Definite Need in the Field of New Testament Textual Criticism. w. Arndt _._. ____ ._ ............................ _ ................ 180 Outlines on Gospels Adopted by Synodical Conference ............ _... 187 Theological Observer ........................... ................................ _ .... c ••••• _ ••• _ ••••• 199 Book Review _ ........................................ _ ................................... _ .. _ ..... __ .. 212 Ein Prediger muss nlcht aJlem wei- den. also dass er die Schafe unter· weise. wie ale rechte Christen sollen seln, sondern such daIleben den Woe!- fen we ren. dass de die Schafe nicht angrcifen und mit f "lll;cher Lehre ver- fuehren und Irrtun J~1Jehren. Luther E.s lst kein Ding, das die Leute mehr be! der K1rche bebaelt delU1 die gute Predigt. - Apolouie. An. 24 If the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare hJrnselt to the battle? -1 COT. 14;8 Published for the Ev. Luth. S. od of Mis:;ouri, Ohlo, and Other States CONCORD PUBLJSBING BOUSE, Sf. Louis 18, Mo. I'BIIHD IN 0'. 8. 4. 212 Book Review Book Review All books reviewed in tWs periodical may be procured from or through Con- cordia Publishing Bouse, 3558 S. Jefferson Ave., St. Louis 18, Mo. Studies in the Epistle to the Hebrews. Also Lectures on the Epistle to Titus. By H. A. Ironside, Litt. D. Published by Loizeaux Brothers, New York. 192 pages, 7lhx5. $1.25. The studies in Hebrew were first published in serial form in 1931 and 1932 in the monthly expository magazine Revelation. Dr. Ironside is a Fundamentalist, and the studies are written throughout from the viewpoint of Dispensationalism and Calvinism. While he is a staunch defender of Verbal Inspiration and of the deity of Christ, yet strange to say, he refers Ps.2:7 to Christ's conception and birth by the Virgin Mary (pp. 34, 35), and while he upholds the vicarious atonement, he limits the latter to the elect. On the phrase "having purged our sins" he writes: "There are many whose sins are not purged. . .. It is the act of making an available means for purgation that is here stressed." That is doing injustice to the clear words of the text. His Calvinistic back- ground compels him to regard the apostates described chap. 6:4, 5 and 10:26-31 as persons who never have been regenerated, "never knew what it was to receive the Lord Jesus as their own personal Savior" (pp. 80,81) . The author's Dispensationalism crops out time and again and, with his Calvinism, tends to mar the enjoyment .one might otherwise get from reading this boek. The studies on Titus were first published in Moody's Monthly. They are rather brief, cevering pages 179-192. The "washing of regeneration" is net Baptism, but "the applicatien .of the Werd of God to heart and conscience," p. 189. THEa. LAETSCH Names of God in the Old Testament. By Nathan J . Stene. Published by Moody Press, Chicago, m. 160 pages, 73,4x5¥.l. $1.00. This beek was written by a converted Jew whe is new prefessor of Hebrew at Moody Bible Institute. While not subscribing te every interpretation, we regard this book as profitable reading and stimulating for the study of the marvelous names of God. The names treated in this book are: Elohim, Jehovah, Adonai, El Shaddai (Gen. 17:1, 2), Jehovah- Jireh (Gen. 22:14), Jehovah-Rophe (Ex. 15:26), Jehovah-Nissi (Ex. 17:15), Jehovah-M'Kaddesh (Lev. 20:8), Jehovah-Shalom (Judg.6:24), Jehovah- Tsidkenu (Jer. 23: 6), Jehovah-Rohi (Ps. 23: 1), Jehovah Shammah (Ez. 48:35) . On page 106 the author says that "man must of his own free will exercise that provision and power" in spiritual things with which God has endewed him. If a man can exercise pewer, he is no longer dead; and if a man who was dead in trespasses and sins has received pewer to choose that which is spiritually good, he is no longer spiritually dead, but God has through His Gospel made him spiritually alive, regenerated him, made him a willing servant of his Maker. TH.LAETSCH Book Review 213 Let Us Reason Together. A Summary of Christian Teaching. By Rupert H. Schroeder. Authorized by the Army and Navy Com- mission of the Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) . Concordia Publishing House. 218 pages, 3% X 4%. 75 cents. Questions and Answers, Part 1-3. 15 cents. Here is a new book in the field of adult instruction for church membership. It was written in particular for the assistance of chaplains and civilian pastors connected with candidates for church membership in the armed forces of our country. The form of presentation is that of a group discussion given in detail in the book, various members of a membership class being brought into the conversation, with the pastor presenting the Scriptural view in a very skillful manner. Prac- tically every ancient and modern objection to Scriptural truth is brought out in the discussion of the group. The approach is interest- ing, and it will be worth finding out whether this form of teaching can be done on the basis of conversations written out in such detail. Yet we believe that a pastor with some experience can use a text of this type successfully. There are three little pamphlets of tests and one of answers included in the set. The answers are according to the true-false method, whose advantages and drawbacks are suf- ficiently well known to all educators. If the book will serve to bring further people into the Church or to the knowledge of the truth, it will have served its purpose. P . E. KRETZMANN In Thy Light. 12 Radio Addresses. By Walter E. Bauer, Ph. D. Con- cordia Publishing House. 75 cents. We welcome this contribution to the literature of the Church from a faculty member of our Lutheran University at Valparaiso, Indiana. Dr. W. E. Bauer is professor of history and political science. After his graduation from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, he served congregations in Arkansas and New York, received his master's degree from Columbia University, and took his doctorate at Cornell. He has been at Valparaiso for eighteen years. The twelve addresses were originally delivered to a radio audience in the Chicago area. They bear these titles: 1. Behold the Man. 2. Martin Luther-Then and Now. 3. Education-a Promise or a Menace. 4. The Christian Way in Education. 5. Religion and Education. 6. Christianity and Civilization. 7. Christianity or Paganism. 8. "Free- dom's Holy Light." 9. Lincoln Speaks to a World at War. 10. Good Counsel from the Father of His Country. 11. Reconstruction-a Moral Problem. 12. The Kingship of Jesus. The content of each address is scholarly, while the presentation is in simple language. It is a book which should be recommended by pastors to parents and young people, especially to those who are interested in Christian education. L.J.SIECK In Season _ . Out of Season. Occasional Sermons. Concordia Publish- ing House. $1.50. The busy pastor will appreciate this volume of occasional sermons. He will find in these addresses new thoughts and new approaches to the Book Review .."bject matter of his preaching on various occasions, ranging from wed- ngs and funerals to anniversaries, graduation, the installation of a parochial school teacher, dedication of church windows, Mission Sunday, -~tional days, etc. The thirty sermons are fresh from the pen of 1;--nty- ree Missow' ~yno(l preachers, ea~~. writws in AU" own style ~ 1 for his particular audience, yet all alike in this that they direct the hemef to Christ, the Savior. We recommend it to you as a helpful v-'-llTIe. L.J.Sm I Crucified the Lord. A Series of Lenten Meditations. By R. R. Belter. The Lutheran Literary Board, Burlington, Iowa. 124 pages.·%X 7314. $1.00. This is an excellent series of forty Lenten meditations - brief, in- structive, devotional, and covering in their compass the salient points in the sacred narrative of Christ's suffering and death. The central thought pervading the meditations is given in the words which are used as the title of the book I Crucified. the Lord and which focus the reader's attention on his sin as causative of the Lord's Passion, but also on his claim to Christ's precious redemption. The Christian who penitently and believingly reads these devout studies in sin and grace will glean from them not only abundant comfort for his trouble of sin, but will also, through the power of the Word, take from the Gospel of Christ's suffering new holy zeal to amend hi:; life. A commendable fea~_..'! of the book is that it induces the reader to study with deep interest the 6