Tim Naab, a friend with a long story in Pentecostalism, its gross misfortunes, its misleadings, its ignorances, its deceptions, its manifold abuses in American religious history and its long shadows over his own generations personally (not to mention America), has turned Calvinistic on TULIP with a rap beat. RA is not inclined to poetry. Even Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, Canterbury, told Henry VIII, that he was not a poet, but a liturgist. Never mind Petrarch, Shakespearean sonnets, John Donne, or John Milton. Here's Tim Naab on TULIP...and we hear a rapsta' beat behind it. Watch some salesman, marketeer, musician and enthusiast pick up on it and sell it.
Tim Naab
Tim Naab
Phil, if Naab started as a Pentecostalist and is now interested in the doctrines of grace, I can only bow in humble thanks to Almighty God. Who knows where God might take this brother?
ReplyDeleteI ended up closest to the conservative Presbyterian/Reformed type of Christianity after some youthful flirtations and frustrations with the charismaniac movement. The doctrines of grace, which I kept stumbling over in John and Paul no matter how much people decried the name of Calvin, were the wedge that made me consider what other riches the 16th and 17th centuries had recovered, and later ages had squandered.
As for the rap, I don't mind the rhythm and rhyme. If it will reach someone and get him deeper into the Word, I'm not going to quibble, even if I'm more into metrical Psalms and classical Lutheran and English hymnody.
Cepha, Tim has made enormous strides in insights to the Baptacostalist world in the direction of Reformed thought, replete with regrets over lost years and involvements that affected his offspring. Tim is a good resource man on Pentecostalist history.
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