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J.I. Packer has died

Deacon

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by Leland Ryken in Christianity Today

James Innell Packer, better known to many as J. I. Packer, was one of the most famous and influential evangelical leaders of our time. He died Friday, July 17, at age 93.

J. I. Packer was born in a village outside of Gloucester, England, on July 22, 1926. He came from humble stock, being born into a family that he called lower middle class. The religious climate at home and church was that of nominal Anglicanism rather than evangelical belief in Christ as Savior (something that Packer was not taught in his home church).

Packer’s life-changing childhood experience came at the age of seven when he was chased out of the schoolyard by a bully onto the busy London Road in Gloucester, where he was struck by a bread van and sustained a serious head injury. He carried a visible dent in the side of his head for the rest of his life. Nevertheless, Packer was uncomplaining and accepting of what providence brought into his life from childhood on.

Much more important than Packer’s accident was his conversion to Christ, which happened within two weeks of his matriculation as an undergraduate at Oxford University. Packer committed his life to Christ on October 22, 1944, while attending an evangelistic service sponsored by the campus InterVarsity chapter.

Although Packer was a serious student pursuing a classics degree, the heartbeat of his life at Oxford was spiritual. It was at Oxford that Packer first heard lectures from C. S. Lewis, and though they were never personally acquainted, Lewis would exert a powerful influence on Packer’s life and work. When Packer left Oxford with his doctorate on Richard Baxter in 1952, he did not immediately begin his academic career but spent a three-year term as a parish minister in suburban Birmingham

Although Packer was a humble man who repudiated the success ethic, his life nonetheless reads like a success story. His first book, Fundamentalism and the Word of God (published in 1958) sold 20,000 copies in its first year and has consistently been in print since. In 2005, Time magazine named Packer one of the 25 most influential evangelicals.

When Christianity Today conducted a survey to determine the top 50 books that have shaped evangelicals, Packer’s book Knowing God came in fifth. His fame and influence were not something that he set out to accomplish. He steadfastly refused to cultivate a following. Instead, he made his mark with his typewriter (which he used to compose his articles and books throughout his life).

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Martin Marprelate

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He was a very considerable theologian. His books Knowing God and Fundamentalism and the word of God are both very well worth reading.
However, in the 1960s, he co-authored a book called (if I remember) Growing into Unity with an Anglo-Catholic which revealed that he was prepared to compromise on Biblical truth for the sake of denominational unity. He and John Stott put back the cause of evangelical Anglicanism for 50 years by opposing Dr Lloyd-Jones' call for evangelical unity outside of denominations. That is one reason why they both have better reputations outside of Britain tan within it.
 

tyndale1946

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NEGATIVE~! His body is dead - He is rejoicing with the Lord! He is with complete peace!

A friend of mine Ted way back in the day, said Brother Glen you really need to read Knowing God, very excited... I said Ted i will one of these days and put it off... Well my dearest friend Ted has long to be the Lord and over the years I have read the works of many English Theologians but never Knowing God... Well I know in my heart and soul that Ted and J.I. Packer are with the Lord... And so just a few minutes ago I ordered the book... Now I will see for myself what my friend Ted was so excited about... Brother Glen:)

Hebrews 11:4... He being dead yet speaketh.

Btw I know this was taken out of context and originally applied to Able but I don't think it would stretching it to say it applies to Ted and J. I. Packer too:Biggrin
 
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Earth Wind and Fire

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A friend of mine Ted way back in the day, said Brother Glen you really need to read Knowing God, very excited... I said Ted i will one of these day and put it off... Well my dearest friend Ted has long to be the Lord and over the years I have read the works of many English Theologians but never Knowing God... Well I know in my heart and soul that Ted and J.I. Packer are with the Lord... And so just a few minutes ago I ordered the book... Now I will see for myself what my friend Ted was so excited about... Brother Glen:)

Hebrews 11:4... He being dead yet speaketh.

Btw I know this was taken out of context and originally applied to Able but I don't think it would stretching it to say it applies to Ted and J. I. Packer too:Biggrin
You had better get ready to read the Anglo-Catholic, The Book of Common Prayer then... throw out all your appreciation for Baptist distinctives... set up an alter and kneel to it.
 

tyndale1946

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Right now I am reading an studying An Exposition of Hebrews by A.W. Pink verse by verse... Now I agree with somethings. Pink says and I also disagree with somethings he says, I take the meat according to my biblical understanding and throw out the bones... I hear what they say but I feel I'm a very discerning Christian and usually I have searched it for myself or will, to come to the full understanding... I have been walking with the Lord a long time and until someone enlightens me to a different interpretation, I usually go with what I know and have learned over the years... Same as I agree and disagree with some on here... I don't feel J.I. Packer will slip anything by me or shake my belief in any way... No preacher, teacher, writer or poster is infallible... I measure everything according to word of God... Brother Glen:)

Btw... Sorry I drifted from the OP... But I'll still read the book!
 
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Martin Marprelate

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But I'll still read the book!
I don't think you'll be disappointed. Packer was steeped in the Puritans and is a fine writer.
He and Lloyd-Jones collaborated on a number of projects, but when he collaborated with this Anglo-Catholic, Lloyd-Jones broke off the relationship.
The Church of England still has some fine evangelicals in its ranks, but they are becoming totally marginalized, and some of the blame for that has to go to Stott and Packer.
 

tyndale1946

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I don't think you'll be disappointed. Packer was steeped in the Puritans and is a fine writer.
He and Lloyd-Jones collaborated on a number of projects, but when he collaborated with this Anglo-Catholic, Lloyd-Jones broke off the relationship.
The Church of England still has some fine evangelicals in its ranks, but they are becoming totally marginalized, and some of the blame for that has to go to Stott and Packer.

Yes Martin!... We as men walk with feet of clay... The only one that is perfect is Christ... I learned that lesson a long time ago as a young man of 15 as I worshiped with of body believer that constituted 22 churches, but not being in church myself... I watched as these God fearing men and women, have a disagreement of some sort which I never discovered that split 22 churches right down the middle... Eleven went one way and eleven went the other way... The ones that fellow shipped with one another of each side could fellowship no longer and I lost many friends... Seven years later in 1968, I joined the church I grew up in but the breach was still in place... Thirty years later in 1990 what was left of the churches came back together, but for our church it was to late, the young in our church, had long left but I stayed the course, until we closed the doors in 2004 ... I have seen the good and the bad of God's people, including myself... I'm now 74 and a lot of water has gone under the bridge... But I always weep at what could have been... Brother Glen:(
 
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Van

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I do not think there is a more anti Calvinist on this forum than myself, but when a great man of God passes, we should all take heart. Mr. Packer presented his understanding of scripture to a needful world. Even I have his "Knowing God" on my bookshelf. Now is not the time to find fault, but instead to raise up the memory of a person fully committed to Christ. I am sure Christ's message is ringing in his ears, "welcome home, faithful servant."
 

JonC

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I do not think there is a more anti Calvinist on this forum than myself, but when a great man of God passes, we should all take heart. Mr. Packer presented his understanding of scripture to a needful world. Even I have his "Knowing God" on my bookshelf. Now is not the time to find fault, but instead to raise up the memory of a person fully committed to Christ. I am sure Christ's message is ringing in his ears, "welcome home, faithful servant."
Well said.
 

Covenanter

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He was known at our university (Hull) through theological students in 1957. I heard him at Westminster Chapel "Puritan Conference" in December 57, shortly after my baptism as a believer. "Puritan & the doctrine of election" I think was his paper.

In July 58 he was the anniversary preacher at Spring Road Evangelical Church, Southampton. I still remember his sermon on "The Word became flesh & TABERNACLED among us." Chatting with him someone asked if we could trust the Prayer Book in discussing the faith with Anglicans. He assured us we could, & another contributed "this child is now regenerate" from the Prayer Book baptism of infants service. That rather spoiled the discussion. He tried to argue we should understand the services by the "39 Articles."

Subsequently I started reading the Prayer Book from the beginning. The first article, "The Act of Uniformity" prescribes the punishments for deviating from the established order of service - fines, prison, being treated as dead & possessions disbursed. I didn't get any further.

In 1966 Martyn Lloyd-Jones was asked to preach to the Evangelical Alliance on his vision for evangelical unity across denominational divisions. Stott rejected his message & caused the great divide, leaving Lloyd-Jones & Packer on different sides of the evangelical disunity.

Sad.
 
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