Mere Orthodoxy | Christianity, Politics, and Culture

The ETS Special with Dr. Fred Sanders, Dr. Gavin Ortlund, and Dr. Matthew Emerson - Mere Orthodoxy | Christianity, Politics, and Culture

Written by Caleb Wait | Nov 27, 2019 6:00:00 AM

Matt and Derek are at ETS in San Diego and are joined by friends of the show, Dr. Fred Sanders, Dr. Gavin Ortlund, and Dr. Matthew Emerson. Banter aside, this episode gives a great look at what kind of fun and rich conversations take place at ETS. Today’s episode ranges from discussions on John Webster’s trinitarian theology, evangelical theological retrieval, and Jesus’ descent to the dead.

Timestamps:

Intro + Overview of ETS [0:00 – 2:08]

Fred Sanders joins Matt and Derek to talk Netflix, podcasts, John Webster’s Trinitarian theology, the struggle of classical trinitarian theology in evangelicalism today, and Talbot’s ‘Master of Arts – Classical Theology‘ Program [2:08 – 18:28]

Next, Gavin Ortlund comes on to talk his recent book, Theological Retrieval for Evangelicals: Why We Need Our Past to Have a Futurehis love for the Mere Fidelity podcast, the two doctrines his book focuses on, and the authority of the patristics and Medieval theologians for evangelicals today [18:29 – 35:26]

Finally, Matthew Emerson joins Matt and Derek to talk about his new book, “He Descended to the Dead”: An Evangelical Theology of Holy Saturday. Emerson explains the doctrinal stability of his view of Jesus’ descent, the exegesis of the work, where in history the church changed its view on the descent, what the church loses by denying a view of the descent, and the difference between ‘hell’ and ‘the place of the dead’ [35:26 – 57:15]

 

Resources Mentioned:

Talbot’s ‘Master of Arts – Classical Theology‘ Program

Theological Retrieval for Evangelicals: Why We Need Our Past to Have a Future by Gavin Ortlund

“He Descended to the Dead”: An Evangelical Theology of Holy Saturday by Matthew Y. Emerson

 

If you’re interested in supporting the show financially, you can check out our Patreon here.

Finally, as always, follow DerekAndrew, and Alastair for more tweet-sized brilliance. Thanks to Timothy Motte for his sound editing work. And thanks to The Joy Eternal for lending us their music, which everybody should download out of gratitude for their kindness.