Historia ecclesiastica
The Weblog of Dr. Michael A. G. Haykin

Milton Audio Now Online

December 1st, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

On November 13, 2008, the Andrew Fuller Center sponsored an event celebrating the life and thought of John Milton (1608-1674).  The occassion was the quatercentenary of Milton’s birth.  This event featured a brief historical introduction to Milton by Dr. Michael Haykin, followed by selected readings from Milton’s works by Dr. Jim Orrick.  The event concluded with a presentation on Milton’s classic work Paradise Lost by Dr. Timothy Paul Jones, interspersed with readings from Mr. Anthony Sauls.

The complete audio of this event is now available for free MP3 download.

Posted by Steve Weaver, Research and Administrative Assistant to the Director of the Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin.

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More on centres of love

November 24th, 2008 Posted in Ancient Church: 2nd & 3rd Centuries

In the latest round of debate regarding the so-called “new atheism,” Christian theologian Doug Wilson takes on Christopher Hitchens in a published give-and-take on the topic Is Christianity Good for the World?[1] Hitchens is convinced that Christianity, along with religion in general, poisons everything good in life. And thus, for him, the answer to the question in the book’s title is a resounding no. Hitchens’ answer, however, is one that would have amazed numerous pagans living in the Roman Imperium in the first four centuries after Christ. The love, generosity, and showing of mercy of believers to those outside of the Christian community was, according to Henry Chadwick–that great patrologist who died this past summer and on whom I still need to write a small appreciation–“probably the most potent single cause of Christian success” during the period of the Roman Imperium.[2]



[1] Is Christianity Good for the World? (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2008).

[2] Henry Chadwick, The Early Church (Rev. ed.; London: Penguin Books Ltd., 1993), 56.

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Centres of love?

November 24th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Evangelicalism has done a great job historically of creating communities of light. But what of centres of love? Have we Evangelicals been as successful there? Are our churches known as places of love? Are we lovingly building into each others’ lives? Sometimes I genuinely fear that the answer to these questions is no and that this is one reason–not the only one, but an important one–why our churches are failing to make a profound impact on our society.

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ETS, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, & Parkside Church

November 24th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Last week I attended the Evangelical Theological Society annual meeting in Providence, Rhode Island, a beautiful city with a rich Baptist history. The busyness of the meetings, both formal and informal, though prevented me from getting to see the nearby First Baptist Church of America–the beautiful 1775 meeting-house–and Brown University. I did see the church in the shuttle taking me to the airport last Thursday and am thankful for the saints of James Manning’s day who built this house of prayer and worship.

This past weekend, my son Nigel and I and a close friend, Stephen Swallow, and his two sons, Peter and Ben, went to Cleveland to see the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Had three hours at the museum–especially interesting were the various written memorabilia, like the report card of John Lennon at twelve years of age in 1953 (the year I was born) or letters relating to Jim Morrison of the Doors. It was fascinating to read a report from Jim Morrison’s Sunday School Superintendent (also written in 1953), after Jim had given a fine Sunday Scool recitation. How different was his end from his beginning! A good reminder of the necessity of finishing well.

Afterwards we stayed in a Marriott hotel and then this morning attended the third worship service at Parkside Church. Alistair Begg preached an excellent word from Isaiah 45 and Acts 17.

All in all a delightful weekend.

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Book Review of Return to Rome by Francis Beckwith

November 15th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Michael Haykin has written a review of Francis Beckwith’s new book, Return to Rome: Confessions of An Evangelical Catholic.  Dr. Francis Beckwith was the president of the Evangelical Theological Society (ETS), until he resigned last year due to his conversion to Roman Catholicism.  This review is very timely, as this book has just been released this week in advance of this year’s annual meeting of ETS.

To find this review and others which might be of interest to our readers, please visit the Book Review page of this site.

Posted by Steve Weaver, Research and Administrative Assistant to the Director of the Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin.

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“Love for the Brothers”: A Message by Dr. Michael Haykin

October 30th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Today in chapel at SBTS, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin preached from 1 John 3:11-24 on the theme of “Love for the Brothers.”  It was an excellent and challenging message that features faithful exposition of the text elucidated by fascinating accounts from the history of the church.  In this message, Dr. Haykin argues that “love for the brothers” (along with the preaching of the Word, the administration of the ordinances, and church discipline) consitutes a clearly biblical mark of the church.  To hear the message or to download the MP3 click here.

Posted by Steve Weaver, Research and Administrative Assistant to the Director of the Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin.

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New Audio Posted

October 27th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Over the last week or so I’ve posted three new MP3s on this site’s Audio page.  The MP3s are of lectures given by Dr. Michael Haykin at a variety of venues.  These include a lecture on William Tyndale given on behalf of Southern Seminary’s Bible Translators in Training student society.  Another lecture on spiritual disciplines for pastors was given at a recent meeting of the Toronto Pastor’s Fellowship.   A final new posting is actually the posting of a lecture from last year’s conference on Islam held by Sola Scriptura Ministries.  Dr. Haykin’s session covers the historical background of Islam.

For more audio by Dr. Haykin visit the Audio page where new MP3s are posted regularly.

Posted by Steve Weaver, Research and Administrative Assistant to the Director of the Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin.

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Fabulous discovery about Thomas Wilcox (1622-1687), author of a minor spiritual classic

October 24th, 2008 Posted in 17th Century, Baptist Life & Thought, Puritans

“Praying will make thee leave sinning or sinning will make leave praying.” [1] This well-known saying may well have originated with Thomas Wilcox (1622-1687), the author of the minor spiritual classic A Choice Drop of Honey from the Rock Christ, which was published before the Great Fire of London in 1666. When I first wrote my Kiffin, Knollys, and Keach in the early 1990s, I included this spiritual classic as an appendix. It was excluded by the publisher, which was providential, for although I knew Wilcox wrote a number of tracts, I thought the above book was the only one extant.

Today, my assistant Steve Weaver kindly got for me a PDF of a 1699 edition of Wilcox’s classic work (published then under the title of A Guide to Eternal Glory). It was attached to nine other tracts (the whole being published by Nathanael Crouch, who was a printer near Cheapside, London) and in the preface “To the Christian Reader” that preceded all of the tracts, Wilcox noted that he had “subjoined some other brief tracts” (p.6), which definitely seems to indicate he is the author, especially since no other names appear with the various tracts. [2] This is a fabulous discovery because it gives us some other material by the author of a remarkable tract that by the 1840s had gone through at least sixty printings and had been translated into numerous languages, including Welsh, Irish Gaelic, French, German, and Finnish. In light of such a printing record, it is no exaggeration to describe it as a minor classic from the late Puritan era. [3] It is currently available from Chapel Library. The Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies hopes to include a fresh edition and textual commentary on it by Dr Stephen Yuille in its Occasional Monographs series, which is to be launched in the near future.

Of the numerous Calvinistic Baptist authors of the seventeenth century, there were really only three who were being read extensively a century or two later. John Bunyan was, of course, one. Another was Benjamin Keach. And the third was Thomas Wilcox, about whom we really know very little. [4] We know that he was born in 1622 at Lyndon, then in Rutland. His early career, though, is shrouded in obscurity. By the 1660s he was living in London on Cannon Street, where a congregation of believers that he pastored met regularly in his home to worship the Lord. During the following decade Wilcox preached to this congregation at the Three Cranes, a wooden building on Tooley Street in Southwark.

Though a convinced Baptist, Wilcox was catholic enough in his sentiments to be invited frequently to preach among the Presbyterians and Congregationalists. He also courageously endured imprisonment a number of times rather than sacrifice his convictions as a Dissenter. He hoped, we are told, that his death might be a sudden one, a hope that was apparently realized when he died in May, 1687. The epitaph on his tomb in Bunhill Fields, the Nonconformist burial ground in London, was a remark that he often made in this regard, “Sudden death sudden glory.” After his death the members of his congregation appear to have joined other Calvinistic Baptist causes in the city.

Do look for Stephen Yuille’s edition of A Choice Drop of Honey from the Rock Christ in our monograph series. The work is based on a phrase from Psalm 81:16 [“He should have fed them also with the finest of wheat: and with honey out of the rock should I have satisfied thee” (KJV)], and it well captures the Christ-centred piety of the early Calvinistic Baptists and the way in which their piety was nourished by those central themes of the Reformation, solus Christus and sola fide.


[1] The Serephick [sic] Soul’s Triumph in the Love of God in Thomas Wilcox, A Guide to Eternal Glory. Or, Brief Directions to all Christians how to attain Everlasting Salvation. To which are added, Several other excellent Divine Tracts (London: Nath. Crouch, 1699), 124.

[2] In a 1676 edition of this classic, there is an appended work, Spiritual Hymns Used by Some Christians at the Receiving the Sacrament of the Lords Supper, with some others (London: Nath. Crouch, 1676). The use of the term “sacrament” by this Calvinistic Baptist is noteworthy, it being a term commonly used by Baptist at this time.

[3] In this regard, see Charles E. Hambrick-Stowe, “The Spirit of the Old Writers: The Great Awakening and the Persistence of Puritan Piety” in Francis J. Bremer, ed., Puritanism: Transatlantic Perspectives on a Seventeenth-Century Anglo-American Faith (Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1993), 281.

[4] Our principal source of information about Wilcox is Thomas Crosby, The History of the English Baptists (London: 1740), III, 101. See also Joseph Ivimey, A History of the English Baptists (London: 1814), II, 465; W. T. Whitley, The Baptists of London 1612-1928 (London: The Kingsgate Press, 1928), 120.

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A church historian’s brief take on The Shack

October 18th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

Tonight I was with a good friend, Scott Dyer (whom I have known since 1982 when he took a class with me on 1 Corinthians, and which I have been teaching at TBS this term on certain Saturdays), and we chatted a little about the recent bestseller The Shack. Scott rightly pointed out how nervey it is to put words in the mouth of our holy Lord–and such words too! When one thinks of recent reading material in Evangelical circles it makes anyone concerned about biblical fidelity and solid theology wince and blush! To think that later generations will judge this day by such wretched theological pablum! Or maybe it and other pieces of literature like it will simply sink into oblivion so that only those church historians who are experts in the theological quirkiness of the early 21st century will know about it. Let’s hope so!

Another good friend, Dr Stephen Yuille, who blogs at Deus pro nobis (love that Latin!), has written a fine review here of The Shack.

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Senator Obama on abortion: a view from the North

October 18th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized

I am not an American, but as a Canadian who believes that our nation is intimately tied to the United States–which to my mind makes some of the remarks by the Liberal Party and the NDP in the most recent election about what they would do for the economy simply pie in the sky (thankfully many Canadian voters saw the inadequacy of the Liberals’ platform in the most recent election)–I am convinced that the American election should be of deep concern to us and be a matter of real prayer.

Here is a disturbing article by Robert George and Yuval Levin that clearly reveals Senator Obama’s position on abortion: Obama and Infanticide. As Dr Russell Moore made plain in Thursday’s chapel at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, this issue of abortion is the critical issue of our day (see his powerful message, “Joseph of Nazareth Is a Single-Issue Evangelical: The Father of Jesus, the Cries of the Helpless, and Change You Can Believe In” (Matt 2:13-23) ), and Christians must make this the critical factor in voting. Otherwise, how can we condemn the Nazi regime for its murderous brutality?

HT: Justin Taylor.

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