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This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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If it's J. Gresham Machen, it's gotta be good! Yeah, that might be an oversimplification, but it's true.
This book is made up of part of a series of radio addresses Machen gave in 1935 – this selection, obviously, focusing on the Person of Christ – his Deity (and what it actually means to describe him as such), what He says about Himself, and what He demonstrated about Himself. These are warm chapters that must've been easy to listen to (at one point Machen apologizes for technical language in a way that brought a smile to my face), but rich in teaching. I only wish we had the recordings. I don't know how, but even with these addresses coming from eight decades ago, they feel like the could've been delivered last week.
My favorite chapter, probably, was on The Sermon on the Mount – it's a long-standing favorite of liberal theologians, and other non-Christians as a way of talking about the “ethics of the New Testament” apart from anything supernatural, miraculous or theological. Machen directly takes on this idea and shows how it's baseless and impossible to actually do.
These addresses were given towards the end of this life, after he's gone through “The Presbyterian Conflict” and all the associated drama and trials. Through that experience, he's a bit more direct. In Christianity & Liberalism Machen's no less forthright, but he talks about Liberal Theologians, or “other teachers”, etc. Here, he doesn't waste time – he just calls them “unbelievers.” It's the same thing, as he demonstrated in his earlier work, but he doesn't do that here.
This is how apologetics should look – easy to understand and follow, yet rich in doctrine and the Bible. Welcoming and winsome while not giving an inch to his opponents. As always, with Machen, this is how we should all be doing it.