1. You Are What You Love by James KA Smith 2. Philosophy the Classics by Nigel Warburton 3. On Beauty and Being Just by Elaine Scarry 4. How to Read the Bible For All its Worth by Gordon D Fee 5. Blue Parakeet by Scot McKnight 6. Old Testament Theology by John Kessler 7. The Pentateuch as Narrative by John H Sailhamer 8. Introduction to Early Judaism by James C Vanderkam 9. The Story of Christianity by Justo Gonzalez 10. Dominion by Tom Holland 11. The Story of Christian Theology by Roger Olson 12. The Ecumenical Councils of the Catholic Church by Joseph Kelly 13. In Stone and Story by Bruce Longenecker 14. Jesus: Made in America by Stephen Nichols (Honorable Mentions: Mark Noll & Douglas Sweeney) 15. Theology as Discipleship by Keith L Johnson 16. Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin 17. The Orthodox Way by Kallistos Ware 18. The Meaning of Tradition by Yves Congar 19. Delighting in the Trinity by Michael Reeves 20. One with Christ by Marcus Peter Johnson 21. The Journey of Modern Theology by Roger Olson
1. You Are What You Love by James KA Smith. In studying Engineering, Business, Theology and Teaching; I have read this book under numerous authors. Truth is truth regardless of the discipline. In business school it was summarized as " I'll tell you what you love in just a couple minutes - show me your daily schedule for the next week.
I think that still leaves hanging that which makes a theologian. What spiritual focus and practices. It is the case that the current credibility hoops one has to jump through are part of the process. You can't find a job description on Indeed that just lists prayer, even as it is probably the most important part. One needs to listen to the Holy Spirit, pray, read, and engage the community of believers and thinkers, Along with Love God, serve God, love people, and serve people. I think the rhetorical point being made there, however is an important one. To re-cap, apparently not all theologians get jobs as theologians. The degree, reading the core literature, reflecting on the key questions, issues, and philosophies, along with being part of a community of practice with expert feedback is an important part of the process. Prayer/reading/holy spirit does seem to play a pivotal role, even a gateway spiritual role, quite literally as prayer nurtures your relationship to Christ.
To quote my best friend who is currently wrapping up his master's degree in philosophy, "Philosophy and Theology are the same thing. The philosophers just don't know it yet."
RC Sproul had a great teaching series on philosophy that drew in theology as a complement: The Consequences of Ideas: An Overview of Philosophy. Years ago I taught an intro to Philosophy class and found a book that was a hit with students who weren't especially interested: Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder. It's a novel but weaves in a user-friendly introduction to philosophy that made it memorable and enjoyable.
The reformers stayed away from them as they labeled them as Sophist. What you are suggesting is against all doctrine, especially the writings in the NT from Paul. Dangerous.
My suggestion, if you want a knowledge and subsequent wisdom that comes from a “good” theology degree. Do this: Read the entire bible over and over again so that you understand the overarching redemptive work of God in creation. Second, read the individual books of the Bible in light of that overarching narrative, and finally read each book in light of the main purpose/objective/theme in each book. This will if done rightly, will introduce you not only to understanding of theology, but more importantly, you can meet with the author and sustainer of all things. Books will help this but are a distant second to this method. Thanks for the work that you are doing.
Seminary provides some tools and direction but also helps in getting hired. I'm a retired Army Chaplain and the military requires an MDiv. Many churches will not consider self-taught people, and some denominations won't ordain the self-taught. I served on my denomination's credentials committee and the self-taught need to show they know as much as the seminary-trained. I readily admit I've learned more from my reading than I did from seminary, but the discipline of seminary got me on the right path.
All good points, and despite the thumbnail, I'm in full support of traditional degrees. But I also recognize they're not for everyone. For the people who just want to learn and can't afford to go into debt, they might not be the best fit
@@Imsaved777 I served as Pastor of a rural church and the impression I got was that "There are 2 kinds of preachers: educated and God-called." Not my point-of-view obviously.
@@agapephilerostorge Many denominations won't ordain unless the individual has some "real world" experience. Academic preparation isn't enough. We have to relate to people. An ex-convict would have seen the worst in people and have a clearer understanding of our fallen, broken world.
@@GospelSimplicity Just FYI.. Jean Calvin sent one of his rival, to be burnt alive. And that's your definition of someone who understands what theology is all about ? 🤦♂🤦♂
I love Frank Sheed's writing. He wrote three books which all treat the Creed in successively greater depth: "A Map of Life," "Theology for Beginners," and then "Theology and Sanity."
Lots of good books on your list! 😊 I'd add if one wants to be a theological scholar then it's worth learning the biblical languages so you aren't as heavily dependent on translations and you can really dig into the Bible at a deeper level and see what theologians have debated over the centuries. A good place to start is learning Koine Greek. I'd recommend Beginning with New Testament Greek (Merkle & Plummer) as a great and ways introduction to the language for someone with zero background. And I'd recommend one of the Tyndale House Greek New Testament editions (there are several, I have the standard one with a limited but useful dictionary in the back) for an aesthetically pleasing edition of the New Testament. There are free Koine Greek lexicons (basically a lexicon is a more sophisticated dictionary) available online as well as better Greek lexicons you can purchase.
I went to college long ago and basically it was just reading books and doing problems. For undergraduate for graduate not much more discussion. So my college experience was books mainly. My major was general engineering with a concentration in petroleum engineering. As I am old now I have been thinking about a theology degree.
I have been watching these book collections on here, obviously with the algorithm. I have picked up my entire collection(hundreds?) in thrift and church bazaars... I know why I have learned so much as I allowed myself to explore many different books and compare the ideas...
If you're in a major city, commonly, you can find clubs for discussing things if discussion is the aspect of education that is most important. I have a formal degree in a technical field and don't think that the in-person education was meaningfully constructive. As soon as I graduated I had to self-educate in several things that were missing from my degree to be relevant to my field because my degree was probably half a decade to a full decade behind the standards of the field I was educated in. I think education is more now a discipline than a piece of paper that says you have been educated. With the internet, the walled garden of education has fallen away. Simply committing to reading 10 pages a day of the great books. Will render a better education I think than a bachelor's in any field. I think the average American receives more of an education through any given hobby than any formal degree / diploma they have.
I’m really happy to see James KA Smith here! He also has a really good summary of Charles Taylor called, “How Not to be Secular” that has really improved my life & career (because A Secular Age is like 800 frickin pages & I will never be be able to retain that much). I’d also like to submit, “Biblical Exegesis” as one of my favorite books from school. I still use it as a reference. I know you mention that Bible studies isn’t for everyone, but just having a simple overall primer is handy.
I have A BA in theology and am 1/3 of the way to my masters, this past semester I put the masters on hold - when asked why I said $40,000 buys alot of books
1. Gospel of Christian Atheism by Thomas J.J. Altizer. 2. Monstrosity of Christ: Paradox or Dialectic? by Milbank and Zizek 3. The Puppet and the Dwarf: Perverse Core of Christianity by Zizek 4. Orthodoxy by GK Chesterton 5. Dynamics of Faith by Paul Tillich 6. Introduction to Christianity by Ratzinger
it is a joy to follow you Austin. Continue reading and following your call. You've got decades to savor all these ideas that came before you. Seriously, when i look at you i see in your dedication a great 21st century theologian in the making🤩
Interesting! And you are not walking a narrow road you are reading tons of different things which is brilliant for your mind! I admire you quite a bit!
Great review Austin. It is interesting that this list is so different from the books I read in seminary 20 years ago. So many great books in theology and biblical studies have come out since then. I think one of the benefits of a theology degree or the program you are putting together is that it equips you to read and understand the kinds of books you are discussing. Keep up the good work! Enthusiastic and dedicated students like yourself are the future of the church.
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The reading plan is a fantastic idea. I would like to implement it but not with every book on the list, as there are some which I'm simply not interested in that much with the time I have. I literally have about 30 theology/exegesis books on the OT and NT right next to me waiting to be read, so I might just insert a few of those in the plan instead of the ones I'm not interested in reading. Thanks for doing this. I picked quite a few from your list which I'm going to order and read. This will be exciting.
You made some great points on this video and I have been down both roads from formal training , free training and just reading a bunch of theology books but if you want to apply for a Lead Pastor position your going to need that degree, with that being said I love this video !
thank you for this! I am going through a journey I call "Personal Seminary" where I take online course, read books, and post what I'm learning on a blog and social media
An interesting and large grouping of books in the blog. I understand why. Guess I am a bit pleased that I have 5 or 6 of the total list on the blog. Well done and good info from you. Thanks.
Great video. Thank you for sharing your list of books. The only one I've read is "How to Read the Bible for All It's Worth" which was the best book I read during my seminary time. Very insightful, but an easy read and suitable for both clergy and laypersons. I've read portions of Calvin's Institutes but not the entire work. Hopefully someday will read it all. I just recently obtained a copy of "The Orthodox Way" and plan to read it soon. The coolest thing was that I was able to purchase from a local library for just 25 cents. They were selling a group of apparently older books and there it was. You've motivated me to read some of the books on your list.
This is a great list! Thank you for putting this together and sharing. Happy to say I've read about half of these titles in my own studies, but I'm still walking away with some new ones to add to my (miles-long) to-read list! Keep up the good work.
Great video - so much to read - at least I have already read some. THANKS!!! I was so blessed when I graduated from high school. I had 2 partial scholarships so the Catholic college I was going to "excused" the rest of my tuition. This was also blessing for some of my friends. I never could have afforded college without this (I lived in New York City). Because of this I was able to get early admission to Naval Officer Candidate School. Following my time in the Navy I was able to get excellent professional positions with companies such as Boeing - later in life I was able to study at Virginia Theological Seminary - all of this was because of a scholarship from a small Catholic college. I have been blessed. By thee way Justo L. Gonzalez 2 volumes is on Audible. Along with some of the others probably?
Fascinating video! I jotted down many of your recommendations. I am a fellow theology nerd and earned my theology grad degree way back in 2004. The reading lists have certainly changed in that score of years; in fact, we have no crossover at all. We read Grudem's and Erickson's systematic theologies, Marsden and Noll on Protestant history, Tom Schreiner, Herman Ridderbos, and NT Wright on Paul, Howard Hendricks and DA Carson on hermeneutics. Many, many more but these are what I remember without looking back at yellowing paper syllabi. As you noted, there was a lot of solid and substantial reading off curriculum for researching papers and just for fun and out of love for the Lord and his Word. PS: One of my current favorite book sets sits atop your shelf: Robert Alter's three-volume Hebrew Bible translation and commentary. Just an amazingly fresh take on the OT. I also looked longingly at what I'm guessing are the Ante-Nicene fathers set just under the neon light. I had the full 38-volume Hendrickson set of pre- and post-Nicene Fathers bought for a king's ransom from CBD. I later sold 'em off when I ran out of room and our third baby was coming. Wish I kept those Ante-Nicenes, though--great stuff in there (all online, I know, but I enjoyed those hardbacks and the two-columns in old type). Thanks for stirring up good memories and YES, I too would exhort an aspiring theologian to invest his money into books not college tuition and enjoy a self-directed lifelong study.
Interesting! I came across nearly all of these, but I think most of them were references or outside research. And yes, those are the Ante-Nicene Fathers. Good eye! I was kindly gifted those from a subscriber.
I love your theme of getting the equivalent of a biblical education without moving to another State and spending thousands. Online programs are much more reasonable because you are not paying room and board. However, none I have investigated have particularly appealed to me and all seem to require one or more courses I regard as silly or devoid of meaning. I had plenty of that with my secular education. Many of the books you suggest are available used and inexpensive on Amazon. I am near the end of my career and will not be pursuing a paid ministry position, so it is hard to justify getting a certificate, diploma or degree that no one will care about. Considering how many free online resources exist, it is hard to decide where to get started.
Believers Those without a standard reference to reality, would have us all follow their lead. As if travel is best done with one foot in their fantasyland. 1 Corinthians 9:20 And unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law; 21 To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law. Literate men have always known god as a tool of fiction. Believers continuously avoid the issue; believers commit the crime of indoctrinating children with a fantasyland vocabulary. These wolves in sheep's clothing are commanded to 'suffer the children to come.' Even Jesus Christ said faith was worthless: You can't move mountains by voice command. Faith is a farce, fantasyland of prophecy, & resurrection. Believers don't get respect outside a camp of fellow believers, can't handle any condemnation of cult views, non-believers are eliminated, declared evil, baptized into the cult fantasy. The inquisitions & witch-killing are ended by secular law & order. Jesus Christ becomes alarmed by the gathering crowd of those seeking signs. He performs them in every chapter. It is astounding, how the Christ fantasy ignores Jesus saying, "This is a wicked generation seeking signs, the only sign given is Jonah," A believer murdered by a larger number of believers. The King of the Jews is mounted on a stick, because Romans made a parody of the icon. "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us: for it is written, cursed is everyone that hangeth on a tree:" Galatians 3:13 We should all indoctrinate children with nonsense like prayer: Nothing fails like prayer in a children's hospital. You trade your last cow for a handful of magic beans & pretend you should be respected for it. We are made illiterate servants of Caesar, "My sheep hear My voice" is the mindset of slavery & Jesus comes "not with peace, but sword", turning everyone to curse the other. The Romans defeated the Jews in war, therefore render to Ceaser. What Jesus are you talking about? The one doing signs in every chapter or the one rebuking those seeking signs? "The only sign is Jonah:" a believer murdered by other believers because he was outnumbered. The Jew is hung from a tree for all time. ua-cam.com/video/xyhv69EFuoM/v-deo.html Proof the Roman Government invented Jesus' story - in 12 minutes.
I am reading books (52 books in 52 weeks in 2022) and chose some religious ones. You have made me add one more to the list. “The Pursuit of God: The Human Thirst for the Divine” by A. W. Tozer “The Path of Prayer” by Samuel Chadwick “The Pentateuch as Narrative: A Biblical-Theological Commentary” by John H. Sailhamer "David: A Man After God's Own Heart" by J. Vernon McGee additionally I will be reading these two which are somewhat religious. “People of the Book” by Geraldine Brooks “Under Satan's Sun” by Georges Bernanos Books I have already read and loved would be "Mere Christianity" by C. S. Lewis "The Case for Christ" by Lee Strobel "A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy "Thru the Bible Commentary, Volumes 1-5: Genesis through Revelation" by J. Vernon McGee "The Best of J. Vernon McGee: A Collection of His Best-Loved Sermons, Volume 1" by J. Vernon McGee "The Best of J. Vernon McGee: A Collection of His Best-Loved Sermons, Volume 2" by J. Vernon McGee "Real Characters: How God Uses Unlikely People to Accomplish Great Things" by J. Vernon McGee "More Real Characters: How God Uses Unlikely People to Accomplish Great Things" by J. Vernon McGee "On Prophecy: Man's Fascination with the Future" by J. Vernon McGee
I’m in the second year of my ThD program and am currently reading The Story of Christianity (and lots of other stuff). I also read Delighting in the Trinity in my Masters program. I enjoyed it for sure. Good video! Thanks for sharing 👍
I never learned speed reading until I got to seminary at the graduate level. College Greek and Bible did not prepare me for the rigorous reading and exam taking. I had 3 years of Biblical Greek in college and floundered in seminary. When the professor refers to a whole book on Friday and says there will be a quiz on Monday, that's over the whole book. I don't know how people do it, I couldn't. Multiply that by 4 classes, and 4 years. Greek, Hebrew, not just reading, but knowing the difference between a genitive absolute and an accusative clause and how they impact the translation, so all the vocabulary, all the grammar, and that's not even the philosophy, history, ministry courses. God bless the M.Div. graduates, especially the ones who have to take the G.O.E. at the end of it all. How'd you like the pressure of the MDiv coupled with an exam at the end that bars you from ordination if you flunk? It seems to me that the church has got to figure out how to get pastors from the academy if the income / payscale doesn't support all of this graduate school debt. There might be a better model for preparation, who knows?
My Reading List: 1 Bible 2 Mental Philosophy and Logic by Coppens 3 Faith Comes from What Is Heard: An Introduction to Fundamental Theology by Feingold 4 Systematic Study of The Catholic Religion by Coppens (Very accessible) or Hunter's Outlines of Dogmatics 5 Mental Prayer by Lehodey 6 Through New Eyes by B.Jordan 7 A House for My Name: A Survey of the Old Testament by Leithart 8 The Unseen Realm by Heiser 9 Who Shall Ascend the Mountain of the Lord? by Morales 10 Paul and the Faithfulness of God by Wright 11 On Divine Revelation by Lagrange 12 Church Fathers: From Clement of Rome to Augustine by Ratzinger (As well as his books on Incarnation and the Holy Trinity) 13 The Soul's Journey into God by Bonaventure 14 Echoes of Scripture in the Gospels by Hays 15 From Shadows to Reality: Studies in the Biblical Typology of the Fathers by Danielou 16 The Summa Theologiae by Aquinas 17 An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith by Damascene 18 Mysterium Paschale by Urs von Balthasar 19 The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine by Pelikan 20 The Imitation of Christ by Kempis 21 The Gospel of John: A Commentary by Keener
Excellent. I challenge you to add a thoroughly reformed (not popular evangelically reformed) title on systematic and biblical theology. A couple of potential suggestions - Thomas Watson’s ‘Body of Divinity’, Geerhardus Vos ‘Biblical Theology’ (dense read), Bavinck’s ‘Wonderful Works of God’.
@@risingdawn5788 My favorite Protestant work is Institutes of Elenctic Theology by Turretin and Hodges Systematic Theology, but I find Catholic books on Dogmatics/Apologetics/Systematic theology/Scholastics as more clear, because of the underlying philosophy, it's way more rich, has more clarity and has more crucial distinctions fleshed out. They give great categories which is knowledge that often lacks in a lot of discussions an it should be a foundation for understanding Early Reformers and some of the greatest debates between Catholics and Protestant which are deff not James White type debates XD. So reading Dogmaticians like Lagrange, Pohle ,Aquinas or something easier as Coppens works are a must IMO for those seriously interested in Theology.
@@CroElectroStile Although I’m vehemently against Roman Catholicism, I will be reading Thomas Aquinas, God willing, and will add these other names to my list.
@@doctor1alex You might want to start with the Summa of the Summa by Peter Kreeft it’s much more approachable before you launch into the lifetime study of Aquinas.
Im 31 and about to start going back to school. I love philosophy and theology but decided if im going to pay out of pocket for my education it’s going to be in something I can’t actually learn on my own, so I picked physics. Already spent my GI bill on a bachelors in Audio Engineering so I have an idea on what it’s like to have not so useful degrees lmao. Thanks for this !
Interesting list . Me coming from a conservative reformed tradition was presently surprised by some of your choices. Several of your books are currently on my shelf. I do have a question about a church history book that is not on your list. Could you suggest a book on the great schism? The western view ( typically the RCC view or evolved from it ) seems to dominate what I have seen. Blessings
I was surprised no pre-reformation writings made it onto your list. The Early Church Fathers, Augustine, Aquinas? The ones you chose seem like relatively modern books, the oldest being Calvin. For those interested in the Patristics, I think a really good layman’s set is the 3 vol. edited by Jurgens “Faith of the Early Fathers.”
@@damianperez3649 Well the documents in this set are from @46-600 AD, so yes, this was long before the Church split. There are docs from both the East and West. Very interesting, and i would argue crucial, to read what the Early Church believed and how the Church functioned. I don’t know how any theology education could be considered complete without reading the Patristics. As to their being Catholic, to avoid Catholicism, you’d have to only read writings from 500 of the Church’s 2000 year history. In addition, you’d have to avoid the Bible itself since the canon was decided on by Catholic bishops.
Thank you Austin for sharing so much of your own journey, experiences and now resources. As a fellow pilgrim I have enjoyed and benefited from crossing your path of discoveries regularly these last few years. Happy New Year to you and Eliza and God bless you and yours.
Many years ago, I forget the kind Pastor's name, Moody Bible Institute Radio sponsored an evening program, 2x? weekly ~ Call in format. I loved it, listened all the time, Filled a Bible full of notes. I'm guessing said Pastor may have passed by now. If anyone is knows of anything similar that is currently available, I'd love to hear about. I'm in Chicago area.
I looked over you books in the blog. How do you reconcile The Institutes, John Calvin and most of the others, including Andy Stanly? The Institutes were the most helpful for me as I had a misconception of God, creation and the church although I had been in the church many years reading other books. Most of these books are from this era and have deviated from the Church Fathers. Before I read any of these I would read Calvin's commentaries, The institutes, The Ante Nicaean Fathers, John Owen and the likes.
How about “The Summa of the Summa” by Dr. Peter Kreeft. At a “mere” 536 pp, it’s great for those of us too wimpy, broke, or busy to read the entire Summa Theologica 😁
When my draft book 'Triple Justification of the Blood Covenant of Jesus' is published, it must be the core reading for salvation, and is based on 'hereafter' teaching. 'Hereafter' is based the truth having exposed the myths, and my Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', as there is a vital disconnect between the religion of Abraham and 'Christianity', the church of God started with Abraham.
Nice breakdown. Thanks Austin. I just stumbled across your channel and I feel like I already know you somehow. Lol I’m gonna peep your videos and see about how I may best be served and serve others through your content. Be encouraged! Be Blessed! -Skylarr
Lol, and I mean truly out loud. You gave me a chuckle. Calvin was tormented by his own obsessions and doubts, based on his own life experience as one who felt forced into everything and incredibly disempowered, as well as chronically ill. At least Luther got relief from constipation when he desperately needed divine help. But maybe that's exactly what Jenkins had in mind, and therefore truly "worth a reed."
I've been in pastoral ministry since I graduated Bible college in 2006. Nearly every August since then I've looked at going to seminary, wondering if this is the year (I loved Bible college). But yeah... it is so expensive. So September rolls around and I just end up buying a couple books instead. Thank you for these suggestions! I added 3 to my amazon as I watched ;) *4. I now have 4 books on amazon...
That s a wonderful video, can you make more material like this? Maybe you can discuss more about certain books or whatever you consider to be good or bad about them.
The easy solution is go to better seminaries. The schools that cost that much are terrible anyways. Find solid unaccredited seminaries and you find gold.
Thank you so much for this list! I've thought about going back to school to study theology but couldn't at the time with a young child. Also, are you the person who asked Michael Knowles a question about objective reality? Sounded so much like you!!!
Ephesians 4:14 That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive; 1 Peter 2:25 For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.
Studying on your own is easier today with the internet and although you won’t have as much discussion you can avoid indoctrination. Bible colleges and seminaries will be geared toward certain theological perspectives. You can read all the books on your own and make your own decisions but don’t forsake Bible discussions with other theologians. I’m not very smart and I was able to learn Greek and Hebrew by studying on my own using several grammars. I do like school I have an associate degree from a Bible college but have learned the most outside of college utilizing Amazon, UA-cam and many other sources. Just remember very few people will take you serious without a degree but even that makes you wonder if the degree is Gods will or your own.
I have no certification in theology at all, and though taught at C of E school, was mostly Agnostic Atheist until a few years ago. The perfect training to falsify doctrine with an open mind, now not only am I a believer I have the truth, which I find lacking in 'Christianity' as it relies on Myths caused by errors. So I am now writing a book, but in the meantime on my own behalf have a Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', and I truly believe theology study must be independent.
Great overview. Thanks for this. It's important to recognise the diffence between cost and value. It's easy to overlook the ongoing value of the community interaction and feedback you get which help you refine your thinking. Not to mention, the ways in which the degree serves as shorthand for "I know this area of inquiry" and a gateway issue to getting pastoring jobs. Certainly a non-degree individual competing against a degree. I think some of the value is also the speed--you're also playing for the speed of the process. You're paying for perspectives that reading a book alone can't provide. And you're paying for the alumni network. Overall it's a signal to future employers. No amount of saying I've read 50 of the classics or 100 of the classics is the same as the community formation or the authority or significance assigned to a degree from a top-level seminary. I think you're also paying for mentors and relationships. Finally, the cost of a degree is also amortised over a lifetime. I would suggest in the same way a teaching degree does. Your time in a degree program can be an inflection point of maturity. If you have the opportunity to get a seminary degree from a reputable program and you feel God moving you in that direction. Do it. The cost issue is a secondary concern at best.
There would be no Protestant Churches nor Bibles without the Catholic Church. There are approximately 1,500 years of Apostolic, Church Fathers, Church Doctors, and History from many varieties of sources that will give anyone a good grounding in whatever path they choose to follow.
Absolutely, but it’s worth warning that the “church fathers” weren’t all in agreement and some of were pretty out there developing unorthodox ideas. Additionally, a lot of their writings aren’t as theologically precise as we would like today so we must make sure we’re not interpreting them through a lens outside of their context.
Hi thanks for making this video. I’ve been looking for something like this for soo long. Would you also be able to make a video/blog on the assignments you had to complete during your studies. I’d love to use that in conjunction with the 2 year reading plan. Thanks again
1. You Are What You Love by James KA Smith
2. Philosophy the Classics by Nigel Warburton
3. On Beauty and Being Just by Elaine Scarry
4. How to Read the Bible For All its Worth by Gordon D Fee
5. Blue Parakeet by Scot McKnight
6. Old Testament Theology by John Kessler
7. The Pentateuch as Narrative by John H Sailhamer
8. Introduction to Early Judaism by James C Vanderkam
9. The Story of Christianity by Justo Gonzalez
10. Dominion by Tom Holland
11. The Story of Christian Theology by Roger Olson
12. The Ecumenical Councils of the Catholic Church by Joseph Kelly
13. In Stone and Story by Bruce Longenecker
14. Jesus: Made in America by Stephen Nichols
(Honorable Mentions: Mark Noll & Douglas Sweeney)
15. Theology as Discipleship by Keith L Johnson
16. Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin
17. The Orthodox Way by Kallistos Ware
18. The Meaning of Tradition by Yves Congar
19. Delighting in the Trinity by Michael Reeves
20. One with Christ by Marcus Peter Johnson
21. The Journey of Modern Theology by Roger Olson
Thank you, for the list of books to delve into Christian theology.
1. You Are What You Love by James KA Smith. In studying Engineering, Business, Theology and Teaching; I have read this book under numerous authors. Truth is truth regardless of the discipline. In business school it was summarized as " I'll tell you what you love in just a couple minutes - show me your daily schedule for the next week.
Dr. Michael S. Heiser didn't made the list? interesting
_ “If you are a theologian, you will pray truly; if you pray truly, you will be a theologian.”_ -- Evagrius Ponticus
"If you get a theology degree, you will pay truly." -me :p
I think that still leaves hanging that which makes a theologian. What spiritual focus and practices.
It is the case that the current credibility hoops one has to jump through are part of the process. You can't find a job description on Indeed that just lists prayer, even as it is probably the most important part. One needs to listen to the Holy Spirit, pray, read, and engage the community of believers and thinkers, Along with Love God, serve God, love people, and serve people. I think the rhetorical point being made there, however is an important one.
To re-cap, apparently not all theologians get jobs as theologians. The degree, reading the core literature, reflecting on the key questions, issues, and philosophies, along with being part of a community of practice with expert feedback is an important part of the process.
Prayer/reading/holy spirit does seem to play a pivotal role, even a gateway spiritual role, quite literally as prayer nurtures your relationship to Christ.
There are many theologians who don't know the true God.
@IndyDefense😂😂
To quote my best friend who is currently wrapping up his master's degree in philosophy, "Philosophy and Theology are the same thing. The philosophers just don't know it yet."
Interesting!
A Catholic saying for You.
Philosophy is the Handmaiden of Theology.
RC Sproul had a great teaching series on philosophy that drew in theology as a complement: The Consequences of Ideas: An Overview of Philosophy. Years ago I taught an intro to Philosophy class and found a book that was a hit with students who weren't especially interested: Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder. It's a novel but weaves in a user-friendly introduction to philosophy that made it memorable and enjoyable.
The reformers stayed away from them as they labeled them as Sophist. What you are suggesting is against all doctrine, especially the writings in the NT from Paul. Dangerous.
That's a nice way to think of it, I took philosophy and will be taking it again in a community College, and my pathway is towards studying theology
My suggestion, if you want a knowledge and subsequent wisdom that comes from a “good” theology degree. Do this: Read the entire bible over and over again so that you understand the overarching redemptive work of God in creation. Second, read the individual books of the Bible in light of that overarching narrative, and finally read each book in light of the main purpose/objective/theme in each book. This will if done rightly, will introduce you not only to understanding of theology, but more importantly, you can meet with the author and sustainer of all things. Books will help this but are a distant second to this method. Thanks for the work that you are doing.
Seminary provides some tools and direction but also helps in getting hired. I'm a retired Army Chaplain and the military requires an MDiv. Many churches will not consider self-taught people, and some denominations won't ordain the self-taught. I served on my denomination's credentials committee and the self-taught need to show they know as much as the seminary-trained. I readily admit I've learned more from my reading than I did from seminary, but the discipline of seminary got me on the right path.
All good points, and despite the thumbnail, I'm in full support of traditional degrees. But I also recognize they're not for everyone. For the people who just want to learn and can't afford to go into debt, they might not be the best fit
From what I see leading churches today I question whether the people leading the flock have actually finished grammar school.
@@Imsaved777 I served as Pastor of a rural church and the impression I got was that "There are 2 kinds of preachers: educated and God-called." Not my point-of-view obviously.
@@bobleroe3859
Ex-convicts are the best pastors compared to head-knowledge pastors.
@@agapephilerostorge Many denominations won't ordain unless the individual has some "real world" experience. Academic preparation isn't enough. We have to relate to people. An ex-convict would have seen the worst in people and have a clearer understanding of our fallen, broken world.
I read many of these while in college for my pastoral degree! Fantastic list here. Many books I want to go back and re read. Thanks for sharing!
My pleasure!
@@GospelSimplicity Just FYI.. Jean Calvin sent one of his rival, to be burnt alive.
And that's your definition of someone who understands what theology is all about ? 🤦♂🤦♂
@@goofygrandlouis6296Calvin did not actually
I love Frank Sheed's writing. He wrote three books which all treat the Creed in successively greater depth: "A Map of Life," "Theology for Beginners," and then "Theology and Sanity."
Haven't read them but they sound interesting!
Lots of good books on your list! 😊 I'd add if one wants to be a theological scholar then it's worth learning the biblical languages so you aren't as heavily dependent on translations and you can really dig into the Bible at a deeper level and see what theologians have debated over the centuries. A good place to start is learning Koine Greek. I'd recommend Beginning with New Testament Greek (Merkle & Plummer) as a great and ways introduction to the language for someone with zero background. And I'd recommend one of the Tyndale House Greek New Testament editions (there are several, I have the standard one with a limited but useful dictionary in the back) for an aesthetically pleasing edition of the New Testament. There are free Koine Greek lexicons (basically a lexicon is a more sophisticated dictionary) available online as well as better Greek lexicons you can purchase.
I went to college long ago and basically it was just reading books and doing problems. For undergraduate for graduate not much more discussion. So my college experience was books mainly. My major was general engineering with a concentration in petroleum engineering. As I am old now I have been thinking about a theology degree.
It’s a good idea, you do have to choose your colllege carefully though. Some can be a little strange.
Delighting in the Trinity is a great book! As you said, it is simple, yet deep!
I have been watching these book collections on here, obviously with the algorithm. I have picked up my entire collection(hundreds?) in thrift and church bazaars... I know why I have learned so much as I allowed myself to explore many different books and compare the ideas...
This is amazing! Thank you so much! I've been trying to find a list like this.
Glad it was helpful!
So much wisdom in these volumes. Have added them to my list to read. Thanks!
If you're in a major city, commonly, you can find clubs for discussing things if discussion is the aspect of education that is most important.
I have a formal degree in a technical field and don't think that the in-person education was meaningfully constructive. As soon as I graduated I had to self-educate in several things that were missing from my degree to be relevant to my field because my degree was probably half a decade to a full decade behind the standards of the field I was educated in.
I think education is more now a discipline than a piece of paper that says you have been educated.
With the internet, the walled garden of education has fallen away.
Simply committing to reading 10 pages a day of the great books. Will render a better education I think than a bachelor's in any field.
I think the average American receives more of an education through any given hobby than any formal degree / diploma they have.
I’m really happy to see James KA Smith here! He also has a really good summary of Charles Taylor called, “How Not to be Secular” that has really improved my life & career (because A Secular Age is like 800 frickin pages & I will never be be able to retain that much).
I’d also like to submit, “Biblical Exegesis” as one of my favorite books from school. I still use it as a reference.
I know you mention that Bible studies isn’t for everyone, but just having a simple overall primer is handy.
Michael, good to see your enthusiasm. Suggest you erase that "f" adjective from your vocabulary.
= :- )
@@arttyree4504 why
I have A BA in theology and am 1/3 of the way to my masters, this past semester I put the masters on hold - when asked why I said $40,000 buys alot of books
1. Gospel of Christian Atheism by Thomas J.J. Altizer.
2. Monstrosity of Christ: Paradox or Dialectic? by Milbank and Zizek
3. The Puppet and the Dwarf: Perverse Core of Christianity by Zizek
4. Orthodoxy by GK Chesterton
5. Dynamics of Faith by Paul Tillich
6. Introduction to Christianity by Ratzinger
it is a joy to follow you Austin. Continue reading and following your call. You've got decades to savor all these ideas that came before you. Seriously, when i look at you i see in your dedication a great 21st century theologian in the making🤩
Interesting! And you are not walking a narrow road you are reading tons of different things which is brilliant for your mind! I admire you quite a bit!
Great review Austin. It is interesting that this list is so different from the books I read in seminary 20 years ago. So many great books in theology and biblical studies have come out since then. I think one of the benefits of a theology degree or the program you are putting together is that it equips you to read and understand the kinds of books you are discussing. Keep up the good work! Enthusiastic and dedicated students like yourself are the future of the church.
The reading plan is a fantastic idea. I would like to implement it but not with every book on the list, as there are some which I'm simply not interested in that much with the time I have. I literally have about 30 theology/exegesis books on the OT and NT right next to me waiting to be read, so I might just insert a few of those in the plan instead of the ones I'm not interested in reading. Thanks for doing this. I picked quite a few from your list which I'm going to order and read. This will be exciting.
Looking forward to completing this reading list!
The story of Christianity has been a awesome read so far. Easy to read and follow. Looking forward to volume 2.
Glad you're reading it and enjoying it!
watching your video, not realizing you're at moody! made my heart happy -moody grad :)
If you watch my older videos, you might recognize the Moody dorm room furniture
Well thought, concise, and helpful video. Pastor Greg
Austin, fantastic video. May God grant you many years.
Thank you so much for sharing!
You made some great points on this video and I have been down both roads from formal training , free training and just reading a bunch of theology books but if you want to apply for a Lead Pastor position your going to need that degree, with that being said I love this video !
Thank you for making this list! Many of those sound like theology books that I would like to read.
Gonzales' "Story of Christianity" is must read level of quality. Amazing.
16:40 didn't know Gavin was a doctor...
"The Pursuit of God" by A.W. Tozer and "Mere Christianity" by C.S. Lewis are going to be required reading for my children.
They're both great!
Man, I appreciate all your help in these books I will be getting a few of them. Thanks a lot.
I am glad you read and recommended Calvin's Institutes.
Austin, you’re awesome! Keep it up
thank you for this! I am going through a journey I call "Personal Seminary" where I take online course, read books, and post what I'm learning on a blog and social media
Could you pass me your social media? I would love go learn more about how is going on your studies!
Love it!
Any recommendations for free classes and how do they work?
An interesting and large grouping of books in the blog. I understand why. Guess I am a bit pleased that I have 5 or 6 of the total list on the blog. Well done and good info from you. Thanks.
ABSOLUTELY recommend René Girard’s “The Scapegoat.” The uniqueness of the Passion Narrative among the world religions.
Thankyou for your indepth listings, a place to start from ❤
Great video. Thank you for sharing your list of books. The only one I've read is "How to Read the Bible for All It's Worth" which was the best book I read during my seminary time. Very insightful, but an easy read and suitable for both clergy and laypersons.
I've read portions of Calvin's Institutes but not the entire work. Hopefully someday will read it all.
I just recently obtained a copy of "The Orthodox Way" and plan to read it soon. The coolest thing was that I was able to purchase from a local library for just 25 cents. They were selling a group of apparently older books and there it was.
You've motivated me to read some of the books on your list.
This is a great list! Thank you for putting this together and sharing. Happy to say I've read about half of these titles in my own studies, but I'm still walking away with some new ones to add to my (miles-long) to-read list! Keep up the good work.
I do love your channel. I think you’ll go far.
I appreciate that!
Great video - so much to read - at least I have already read some. THANKS!!! I was so blessed when I graduated from high school. I had 2 partial scholarships so the Catholic college I was going to "excused" the rest of my tuition. This was also blessing for some of my friends. I never could have afforded college without this (I lived in New York City). Because of this I was able to get early admission to Naval Officer Candidate School. Following my time in the Navy I was able to get excellent professional positions with companies such as Boeing - later in life I was able to study at Virginia Theological Seminary - all of this was because of a scholarship from a small Catholic college. I have been blessed. By thee way Justo L. Gonzalez 2 volumes is on Audible. Along with some of the others probably?
Ty so much for this video I found a free bible collage online and I needed books to read so ty so much!!!!
Can I ask where you attend?
@@ashleianderson1630 I attend Christian Leaders Institute
Fascinating video! I jotted down many of your recommendations. I am a fellow theology nerd and earned my theology grad degree way back in 2004. The reading lists have certainly changed in that score of years; in fact, we have no crossover at all. We read Grudem's and Erickson's systematic theologies, Marsden and Noll on Protestant history, Tom Schreiner, Herman Ridderbos, and NT Wright on Paul, Howard Hendricks and DA Carson on hermeneutics. Many, many more but these are what I remember without looking back at yellowing paper syllabi. As you noted, there was a lot of solid and substantial reading off curriculum for researching papers and just for fun and out of love for the Lord and his Word.
PS: One of my current favorite book sets sits atop your shelf: Robert Alter's three-volume Hebrew Bible translation and commentary. Just an amazingly fresh take on the OT. I also looked longingly at what I'm guessing are the Ante-Nicene fathers set just under the neon light. I had the full 38-volume Hendrickson set of pre- and post-Nicene Fathers bought for a king's ransom from CBD. I later sold 'em off when I ran out of room and our third baby was coming. Wish I kept those Ante-Nicenes, though--great stuff in there (all online, I know, but I enjoyed those hardbacks and the two-columns in old type).
Thanks for stirring up good memories and YES, I too would exhort an aspiring theologian to invest his money into books not college tuition and enjoy a self-directed lifelong study.
Interesting! I came across nearly all of these, but I think most of them were references or outside research.
And yes, those are the Ante-Nicene Fathers. Good eye! I was kindly gifted those from a subscriber.
Cheer~~~the study of the nature of God and religious belief.😊
I love your theme of getting the equivalent of a biblical education without moving to another State and spending thousands. Online programs are much more reasonable because you are not paying room and board. However, none I have investigated have particularly appealed to me and all seem to require one or more courses I regard as silly or devoid of meaning. I had plenty of that with my secular education. Many of the books you suggest are available used and inexpensive on Amazon. I am near the end of my career and will not be pursuing a paid ministry position, so it is hard to justify getting a certificate, diploma or degree that no one will care about. Considering how many free online resources exist, it is hard to decide where to get started.
Believers
Those without a standard reference to reality, would have us all follow their lead. As if travel is best done with one foot in their fantasyland.
1 Corinthians 9:20
And unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law; 21 To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law.
Literate men have always known god as a tool of fiction. Believers continuously avoid the issue; believers commit the crime of indoctrinating children with a fantasyland vocabulary. These wolves in sheep's clothing are commanded to 'suffer the children to come.' Even Jesus Christ said faith was worthless: You can't move mountains by voice command. Faith is a farce, fantasyland of prophecy, & resurrection. Believers don't get respect outside a camp of fellow believers, can't handle any condemnation of cult views, non-believers are eliminated, declared evil, baptized into the cult fantasy. The inquisitions & witch-killing are ended by secular law & order. Jesus Christ becomes alarmed by the gathering crowd of those seeking signs. He performs them in every chapter. It is astounding, how the Christ fantasy ignores Jesus saying, "This is a wicked generation seeking signs, the only sign given is Jonah,"
A believer murdered by a larger number of believers.
The King of the Jews is mounted on a stick, because Romans made a parody of the icon.
"Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us: for it is written, cursed is everyone that hangeth on a tree:" Galatians 3:13
We should all indoctrinate children with nonsense like prayer: Nothing fails like prayer in a children's hospital. You trade your last cow for a handful of magic beans & pretend you should be respected for it.
We are made illiterate servants of Caesar, "My sheep hear My voice" is the mindset of slavery & Jesus comes "not with peace, but sword", turning everyone to curse the other.
The Romans defeated the Jews in war, therefore render to Ceaser.
What Jesus are you talking about? The one doing signs in every chapter or the one rebuking those seeking signs? "The only sign is Jonah:" a believer murdered by other believers because he was outnumbered. The Jew is hung from a tree for all time.
ua-cam.com/video/xyhv69EFuoM/v-deo.html Proof the Roman Government invented Jesus' story - in 12 minutes.
I'm finishing up my MDiv and my favorite books are my apologetics texts.
I am reading books (52 books in 52 weeks in 2022) and chose some religious ones. You have made me add one more to the list.
“The Pursuit of God: The Human Thirst for the Divine” by A. W. Tozer
“The Path of Prayer” by Samuel Chadwick
“The Pentateuch as Narrative: A Biblical-Theological Commentary” by John H. Sailhamer
"David: A Man After God's Own Heart" by J. Vernon McGee
additionally I will be reading these two which are somewhat religious.
“People of the Book” by Geraldine Brooks
“Under Satan's Sun” by Georges Bernanos
Books I have already read and loved would be
"Mere Christianity" by C. S. Lewis
"The Case for Christ" by Lee Strobel
"A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy
"Thru the Bible Commentary, Volumes 1-5: Genesis through Revelation" by J. Vernon McGee
"The Best of J. Vernon McGee: A Collection of His Best-Loved Sermons, Volume 1" by J. Vernon McGee
"The Best of J. Vernon McGee: A Collection of His Best-Loved Sermons, Volume 2" by J. Vernon McGee
"Real Characters: How God Uses Unlikely People to Accomplish Great Things" by J. Vernon McGee
"More Real Characters: How God Uses Unlikely People to Accomplish Great Things" by J. Vernon McGee
"On Prophecy: Man's Fascination with the Future" by J. Vernon McGee
The Imitation of Christ is another great one.
So happy to see Delighting in the Trinity on this list! One of my all-time favorite books! Gotta check out the others! Thank you, Austin!
Good books don't replace good mentors. This is important too!
I’m in the second year of my ThD program and am currently reading The Story of Christianity (and lots of other stuff). I also read Delighting in the Trinity in my Masters program. I enjoyed it for sure. Good video! Thanks for sharing 👍
I plan to take MDiv and ThD too! Can you give me more insight or tips before starting MDiv, or Master's in Theology in general? 🤗❤
Marvin the barber?? Great to see your theology videos on my suggested videos
I never learned speed reading until I got to seminary at the graduate level. College Greek and Bible did not prepare me for the rigorous reading and exam taking. I had 3 years of Biblical Greek in college and floundered in seminary. When the professor refers to a whole book on Friday and says there will be a quiz on Monday, that's over the whole book. I don't know how people do it, I couldn't. Multiply that by 4 classes, and 4 years. Greek, Hebrew, not just reading, but knowing the difference between a genitive absolute and an accusative clause and how they impact the translation, so all the vocabulary, all the grammar, and that's not even the philosophy, history, ministry courses. God bless the M.Div. graduates, especially the ones who have to take the G.O.E. at the end of it all. How'd you like the pressure of the MDiv coupled with an exam at the end that bars you from ordination if you flunk? It seems to me that the church has got to figure out how to get pastors from the academy if the income / payscale doesn't support all of this graduate school debt. There might be a better model for preparation, who knows?
Institutes is one of the best works of all time
My Reading List:
1 Bible
2 Mental Philosophy and Logic by Coppens
3 Faith Comes from What Is Heard: An Introduction to Fundamental Theology by Feingold
4 Systematic Study of The Catholic Religion by Coppens (Very accessible) or Hunter's Outlines of Dogmatics
5 Mental Prayer by Lehodey
6 Through New Eyes by B.Jordan
7 A House for My Name: A Survey of the Old Testament by Leithart
8 The Unseen Realm by Heiser
9 Who Shall Ascend the Mountain of the Lord? by Morales
10 Paul and the Faithfulness of God by Wright
11 On Divine Revelation by Lagrange
12 Church Fathers: From Clement of Rome to Augustine by Ratzinger (As well as his books on Incarnation and the Holy Trinity)
13 The Soul's Journey into God by Bonaventure
14 Echoes of Scripture in the Gospels by Hays
15 From Shadows to Reality: Studies in the Biblical Typology of the Fathers by Danielou
16 The Summa Theologiae by Aquinas
17 An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith by Damascene
18 Mysterium Paschale by Urs von Balthasar
19 The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine by Pelikan
20 The Imitation of Christ by Kempis
21 The Gospel of John: A Commentary by Keener
@YAJUN YUAN He is also a trinitarian and "This Rock" is the Actual Rock at Caesarea Phillipi , not Jesus or Peter's statement.
Excellent.
I challenge you to add a thoroughly reformed (not popular evangelically reformed) title on systematic and biblical theology. A couple of potential suggestions - Thomas Watson’s ‘Body of Divinity’, Geerhardus Vos ‘Biblical Theology’ (dense read), Bavinck’s ‘Wonderful Works of God’.
@@risingdawn5788 My favorite Protestant work is Institutes of Elenctic Theology by Turretin and Hodges Systematic Theology, but I find Catholic books on Dogmatics/Apologetics/Systematic theology/Scholastics as more clear, because of the underlying philosophy, it's way more rich, has more clarity and has more crucial distinctions fleshed out. They give great categories which is knowledge that often lacks in a lot of discussions an it should be a foundation for understanding Early Reformers and some of the greatest debates between Catholics and Protestant which are deff not James White type debates XD. So reading Dogmaticians like Lagrange, Pohle ,Aquinas or something easier as Coppens works are a must IMO for those seriously interested in Theology.
@@CroElectroStile Although I’m vehemently against Roman Catholicism, I will be reading Thomas Aquinas, God willing, and will add these other names to my list.
@@doctor1alex You might want to start with the Summa of the Summa by Peter Kreeft it’s much more approachable before you launch into the lifetime study of Aquinas.
Im 31 and about to start going back to school. I love philosophy and theology but decided if im going to pay out of pocket for my education it’s going to be in something I can’t actually learn on my own, so I picked physics. Already spent my GI bill on a bachelors in Audio Engineering so I have an idea on what it’s like to have not so useful degrees lmao. Thanks for this !
I’ve heard that the 6-panel door represents a cross at the top and an open Bible at the bottom.
Interesting list . Me coming from a conservative reformed tradition was presently surprised by some of your choices. Several of your books are currently on my shelf.
I do have a question about a church history book that is not on your list. Could you suggest a book on the great schism? The western view ( typically the RCC view or evolved from it ) seems to dominate what I have seen.
Blessings
This is indirectly related, but Filioque by Dr. Siecienski is great
Check out The Orthodox Church by Kallistos Ware (same author as The Orthodox Way).
I was surprised no pre-reformation writings made it onto your list. The Early Church Fathers, Augustine, Aquinas? The ones you chose seem like relatively modern books, the oldest being Calvin. For those interested in the Patristics, I think a really good layman’s set is the 3 vol. edited by Jurgens “Faith of the Early Fathers.”
That originated from Roman Catholics
@@damianperez3649 Well the documents in this set are from @46-600 AD, so yes, this was long before the Church split. There are docs from both the East and West. Very interesting, and i would argue crucial, to read what the Early Church believed and how the Church functioned. I don’t know how any theology education could be considered complete without reading the Patristics.
As to their being Catholic, to avoid Catholicism, you’d have to only read writings from 500 of the Church’s 2000 year history. In addition, you’d have to avoid the Bible itself since the canon was decided on by Catholic bishops.
Thank you Austin for sharing so much of your own journey, experiences and now resources. As a fellow pilgrim I have enjoyed and benefited from crossing your path of discoveries regularly these last few years. Happy New Year to you and Eliza and God bless you and yours.
Some recommended theology books would be authored by Robert M Price, Richard C Carrier, Steve Wells, Earl Doherty and Kenneth Humphreys.
Many years ago, I forget the kind Pastor's name, Moody Bible Institute Radio sponsored an evening program, 2x? weekly ~ Call in format. I loved it, listened all the time, Filled a Bible full of notes. I'm guessing said Pastor may have passed by now. If anyone is knows of anything similar that is currently available, I'd love to hear about. I'm in Chicago area.
I looked over you books in the blog. How do you reconcile The Institutes, John Calvin and most of the others, including Andy Stanly? The Institutes were the most helpful for me as I had a misconception of God, creation and the church although I had been in the church many years reading other books. Most of these books are from this era and have deviated from the Church Fathers. Before I read any of these I would read Calvin's commentaries, The institutes, The Ante Nicaean Fathers, John Owen and the likes.
nice video..loved it
ps read Aion from Carl Gustav Jung
I almost went to moody aviation school wow Such a small world.
How about “The Summa of the Summa” by Dr. Peter Kreeft. At a “mere” 536 pp, it’s great for those of us too wimpy, broke, or busy to read the entire Summa Theologica 😁
It's true. Sadly, yes, but it is the case that this old venture has become a waste of time and money. A true theologian is one who prays.
Hey Austin, I’m so thankful for your content, rich in spirituality and truly honours Christ. I’m starting Bible College in September, any advice?
That's exciting! I'd say, be open to changing your mind, integrate the academic and spiritual, and stay curious!
When my draft book 'Triple Justification of the Blood Covenant of Jesus' is published, it must be the core reading for salvation, and is based on 'hereafter' teaching.
'Hereafter' is based the truth having exposed the myths, and my Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', as there is a vital disconnect between the religion of Abraham and 'Christianity', the church of God started with Abraham.
Thank you for this.
Thank you so much for this video! You are a blessing :)
What a great video idea! As a Moody grad, I am SO excited to see this!
Nice breakdown. Thanks Austin. I just stumbled across your channel and I feel like I already know you somehow. Lol
I’m gonna peep your videos and see about how I may best be served and serve others through your content.
Be encouraged! Be Blessed!
-Skylarr
My pleasure! Welcome to the channel :)
I'm planning on going to school online through Liberty or Colorado Christian.
This is great. 👍
Thank you for posting.
Calvin’s Tormenters by Gary Jenkins is a great historical work on Calvin and his thought. Worth a read.
Lol, and I mean truly out loud. You gave me a chuckle. Calvin was tormented by his own obsessions and doubts, based on his own life experience as one who felt forced into everything and incredibly disempowered, as well as chronically ill. At least Luther got relief from constipation when he desperately needed divine help. But maybe that's exactly what Jenkins had in mind, and therefore truly "worth a reed."
@@duncescotus2342 It's a good book but not for everyone so no harm no foul if you're not interested in it.
@@mikelandsman8993 That's a jellyfish response. What's good is good. The good tree gives good fruit.
@@mikelandsman8993 Persistently diplomatic. That is an admirable trait, brother Mike. God can use you!
I love reading books like these i struggle on retaining the deeper and more nuanced parts tho
I've been in pastoral ministry since I graduated Bible college in 2006. Nearly every August since then I've looked at going to seminary, wondering if this is the year (I loved Bible college). But yeah... it is so expensive. So September rolls around and I just end up buying a couple books instead.
Thank you for these suggestions! I added 3 to my amazon as I watched ;)
*4. I now have 4 books on amazon...
Going to seminary only makes sense once you've gone. Then it's clear what you didn't know...but thought you did.
Too late, already ordered books ;)
@@jamesgossweiler1349
Maybe next year.
That s a wonderful video, can you make more material like this? Maybe you can discuss more about certain books or whatever you consider to be good or bad about them.
I'm a bookworm, so I'd be happy to
@@GospelSimplicity Amazing😍! It will be a pleasure for me and others to see them!
The easy solution is go to better seminaries. The schools that cost that much are terrible anyways. Find solid unaccredited seminaries and you find gold.
Thank you so much for this list! I've thought about going back to school to study theology but couldn't at the time with a young child.
Also, are you the person who asked Michael Knowles a question about objective reality? Sounded so much like you!!!
My pleasure! Nope, that was not me.
Ephesians 4:14
That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive;
1 Peter 2:25
For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.
Agreed that is what I do
Funny, there is also a great book called "You are what you hate" :) A light book on the Kabbalah. It's also great.
Studying on your own is easier today with the internet and although you won’t have as much discussion you can avoid indoctrination. Bible colleges and seminaries will be geared toward certain theological perspectives. You can read all the books on your own and make your own decisions but don’t forsake Bible discussions with other theologians. I’m not very smart and I was able to learn Greek and Hebrew by studying on my own using several grammars. I do like school I have an associate degree from a Bible college but have learned the most outside of college utilizing Amazon, UA-cam and many other sources. Just remember very few people will take you serious without a degree but even that makes you wonder if the degree is Gods will or your own.
What's "smart" to you?
I have no certification in theology at all, and though taught at C of E school, was mostly Agnostic Atheist until a few years ago. The perfect training to falsify doctrine with an open mind, now not only am I a believer I have the truth, which I find lacking in 'Christianity' as it relies on Myths caused by errors.
So I am now writing a book, but in the meantime on my own behalf have a Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', and I truly believe theology study must be independent.
Great overview. Thanks for this. It's important to recognise the diffence between cost and value.
It's easy to overlook the ongoing value of the community interaction and feedback you get which help you refine your thinking. Not to mention, the ways in which the degree serves as shorthand for "I know this area of inquiry" and a gateway issue to getting pastoring jobs. Certainly a non-degree individual competing against a degree. I think some of the value is also the speed--you're also playing for the speed of the process. You're paying for perspectives that reading a book alone can't provide. And you're paying for the alumni network. Overall it's a signal to future employers. No amount of saying I've read 50 of the classics or 100 of the classics is the same as the community formation or the authority or significance assigned to a degree from a top-level seminary. I think you're also paying for mentors and relationships. Finally, the cost of a degree is also amortised over a lifetime. I would suggest in the same way a teaching degree does. Your time in a degree program can be an inflection point of maturity.
If you have the opportunity to get a seminary degree from a reputable program and you feel God moving you in that direction. Do it. The cost issue is a secondary concern at best.
St Paul had a thorough religious Ed. Jesus Himself didn't go to seminary.
@@aclark903 True. But they lived 2000 years ago.
The timing on this video is insane. Subbed.
Glad to hear that!
In Eastern Orthodoxy, our true theologians are monastics; ascetics….most of our Saints did not have theology degrees.
Here I thought we read a lot in law school but I think seminary has us beat
You should try E.W. Bullingers "How To Enjoy The Bible."
very helpful thank you !
You're welcome!
Did you read "Introduction to Christianity" by Joseph Ratzinger aka Pope Benedikt?
It's my dream to study Semitic languages and the Old Testament. I have no money the Lord will have to provide if it's His will.
There would be no Protestant Churches nor Bibles without the Catholic Church. There are approximately 1,500 years of Apostolic, Church Fathers, Church Doctors, and History from many varieties of sources that will give anyone a good grounding in whatever path they choose to follow.
The Church Fathers - best place to begin if you want to be in the Faith handed down from the Apostles.
Absolutely, but it’s worth warning that the “church fathers” weren’t all in agreement and some of were pretty out there developing unorthodox ideas. Additionally, a lot of their writings aren’t as theologically precise as we would like today so we must make sure we’re not interpreting them through a lens outside of their context.
Love OTT by Kessler.
Hi thanks for making this video. I’ve been looking for something like this for soo long. Would you also be able to make a video/blog on the assignments you had to complete during your studies. I’d love to use that in conjunction with the 2 year reading plan. Thanks again
I'll see what I can do!
The Orthodox Way by Kalistos Ware
The Way Of A Pilgrim
The Interior Kingdom
I would add the Philokalia because you can't read Way of a Pilgrim without hungering to read that book which proved pivotal in his life.