Audio
Baptists: Rooted in Covenant Grace
On 09, Mar 2015 | In Audio, James Renihan | By Brandon Adams
Below is Dr. James Renihan’s audio from Grace Baptist Chapel‘s annual Theology Conference “Baptists: Rooted in Covenant Grace”.
AUDIO:
Session 1 “Genealogy Baptist Style” [MP3]
Session 2 “How Christians Have Put the Bible Together”[MP3]
Session 3 “How Christians Have Put the Bible Together (Part 2)”[MP3]
Session 4 “How Early Baptists Put the Bible Together”[MP3]
Lord’s Day Worship Service – “Haggai 2:10-19 The Nature of True Religion”[MP3]
Radio: New Covenant Theology & The Law
On 29, Jan 2015 | In Audio, Richard Barcellos | By Brandon Adams
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Pascal Denault Covenant Theology (1689 Conference)
On 28, Nov 2014 | In Audio, Pascal Denault, Resources | By Brandon Adams
Pascal Denault recently taught on the covenant theology of the 1689 London Baptist Confession at the first annual 1689 Conference.
Here is the MP3
Here are other formats.
Here are the rest of the sessions from the conference.
Redeemer Radio: The Law of God
Richard Barcellos was interviewed on Redeemer Radio on Chapter 19 of the London Baptist Confession of Faith.
From the Garden to the Covenant of Works (Barcellos)
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Pascal Denault on the Covenant Theology of the 1689 Baptist Confession (RB Seminary)
On 15, Nov 2014 | In Audio, Pascal Denault, Resources, Video | By Brandon Adams
From Reformed Baptist Seminary:
Pascal Denault is an ordained minister of a Reformed Baptist church in Quebec and is the author of The Distinctiveness of Baptist Covenant Theology. In four video lectures below, Pascal discusses the covenant theology of the Second London Baptist Confession of 1689. First, he examines the “covenant of works” as it is formulated in the Westminster Confession, Savoy Declaration, and Second London Baptist Confession in lecture one. Next, in lecture two, he summarizes the “covenant of grace” as it has been traditionally formulated among Reformed and Paedobaptist theologians. In the third lecture, Pascal highlights the unique contribution offered by the Particular Baptists in the 2LBCF to a theology of the covenant of grace. Then he summarizes his study on the covenant theology of the 2LBCF and highlights the practical ramifications in lecture four. Finally, a Q&A session featuring Bob Gonzales and Pascal Denault deals with questions related to confessions of faith and covenant theology. Enjoy!
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 1
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 1 – Pascal Denault from Reformed Baptist Seminaryon Vimeo.
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 2
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 2 – Pascal Denault from Reformed Baptist Seminaryon Vimeo.
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 3
Try here http://rbseminary.org/home/pascal-denault-on-the-covenant-theology-of-the-1689-baptist.html
The Covenant Theology of the 2LBCF, Part 4
Try here http://rbseminary.org/home/pascal-denault-on-the-covenant-theology-of-the-1689-baptist.html
Q&A – Gonzales and Denault on Confessions and Covenant Theology
Question & Answer Session: Confessions of Faith and Covenant Theology from Reformed Baptist Seminary on Vimeo.
From Pascal Denault’s website:
1689 Federalism is the Particular Baptist understanding of the Covenant of Grace as stated in the Second London Confession of Faith of 1689. This particular view is distinct from the Westminster view that holds to the concept of one Covenant of Grace under two distinct administrations which are the Old and the New Covenants. From this view, the Westminster Confession allows the Old Covenant to define the Covenant of Grace (its nature, its stipulations, its blessings) and end up with a Covenant of Grace that is mixed by nature because it includes the physical posterity of all those who profess faith. This understanding was perceived by the Particular Baptists to alter the nature of the New Covenant which is « not like » the Old Covenant (Jer. 31:32) and is pure by nature (Jer. 31:34).
The 1689 Confession rejects the One Covenant/Two administrations view of the Westminster. Instead, it affirms that the Covenant of Grace was only revealed in the Old Testament time until it became a formal covenant when the New Covenant was established. Therefore, the Particular Baptist understanding considers that only the New Covenant is the Covenant of Grace and defines it. This involves that the Old Covenant was not the Covenant of Grace and was only typologically linked to it but was in itself an earthly covenant that came to an end when the heavenly reality was established. Instead of seeing two realities (earthly/heavenly, internal/external) inside of the same covenant of grace, the 1689 Federalism affirms two distinct covenants: an earthly external covenant (the Old) and an heavenly internal covenant (the New). The New Covenant was first a promise that was put under the guard of the Law (the Old Covenant). It was then accomplished, sealed in the blood of Christ and given to believers in the form of a covenant.
In the lectures below, I expose chapter 7 of the 1689 (Of God’s Covenant). These lectures were given at the Reformed Baptist Seminary module on Creeds and Confessions held in Las Vegas October 2014. I offer here the MP3 files, the videos are available at RBS website: http://rbseminary.org/home/pascal-denault-on-the-covenant-theology-of-the-1689-baptist.html
You can find a French version of this teaching here: http://www.unherautdansle.net/alliances/
1. The Covenant of Works (7.1) – Audio MP3
2. The Covenant of Grace – Paedo view (7.2) – Audio MP3
3. The Covenant of Grace – Credo view (7.3) – Audio MP3
4. Summary and conclusions – Audio MP3
5. Q&A (Dr. Bob Gonzales and Pascal Denault) – Audio MP3
Podcast Interview: Jeffery Johnson’s “The Fatal Flaw”
On 27, Sep 2014 | In Audio, Jeffery Johnson, Resources | By Brandon Adams
On episode 19 of our podcast, we got Brandon Adams to interview Jeff Johnson about his book The Fatal Flaw of the Theology Behind Infant Baptism. This is part one of a two part interview (here is part 2.)
After that, we have Sam Renihan on our “Ask a Reformed Baptist” segment. We talk about some Reformed Baptist headlines and give you a preview of next week’s episode featuring part two of the interview.
On episode 20 of our podcast, we got Brandon Adams to interview Jeff Johnson about his book The Fatal Flaw of the Theology Behind Infant Baptism. This is part two of a two part interview (here is part 1.)
After that, we have Dr. James Renihan on our “Ask a Reformed Baptist” segment. We talk about some Reformed Baptist headlines (with our SPECIAL GUEST!) and give you a preview of next week’s episode featuring Richard Barcellos telling us about Reformed Baptist Academic Press.
Redeemer Radio: God’s Covenant
On 16, Sep 2014 | In Audio, Resources, Samuel Renihan | By Brandon Adams
Redeemer Reformed Baptist Church in Redlands, CA has a radio ministry. They have been working through the London Baptist Confession with various pastors from Southern California.
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Samuel Renihan Sermons in Genesis on Covenant Theology
On 16, Sep 2014 | In Audio, Resources, Samuel Renihan | By Brandon Adams
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Christ and His Covenant
On 02, Apr 2014 | In Audio, Resources, Samuel Renihan | By Brandon Adams
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