
Festschrifts are the new rock n roll
I recently received in the post John Frame’s Festschrift, Speaking the truth in love!
My initial tri-perspectivism on it is
Normatively – This book is huge
Situationally – It’s too big to read comfortably in my chair
Existentially – It makes me feel great because it looks massive on the shelf
When you add that to Piper’s volume a mere 542 pages and Bob Godfrey’s tiny 284 odd pages. Festschrifts are all the rage in the reformed world.
It leads one to think who is deserving of a festschrift. My mother has been married to my father for nearly 45 years who by his own admission isn’t the easiest fella to live with, she’s been remarkably patient with 4 very annoying but remarkably gifted children! Surely she is deserving of a festschrift. If you’d like to contribute to it do send Del boy an email, two contributors from Ref 21 have graciously agreed to take part
‘Roadrunner and Wylie Kayote = Iain Murray and Carl Trueman’ – Rodney Trotter
‘Readings from the far right’ – Liam Goligher
On a serious note it does raise the question of how much ‘an ordinary pastor’ can read? If one is preparing sermons, doing pastoral work, meeting with elders etc etc. The amount of time that leaves for reading festschrifts is minimal. I am without an office at the moment whilst I await a shed being put in my back garden (it’s all glory ministering in the UK!) but I shamefully packed away mountains of books I’ve never read and whether I will ever read them is doubtful. One of the besetting sins of ministers is we pretend to have read books we haven’t, it’s kind of geeks one upmanship. What the answer is I don’t know? Part of it has got to be to stop buying so many books, according to Mrs Levy.





























