The Colporteur: Log College Audio
Colporteurs were traveling door-to-door book salesmen and evangelists, bringing God’s word and sound literature to the people of God. Likewise, The Colporteur: Log College Audio brings you readings of 18th-19th century American Presbyterians, and other audio resources. Visit www.logcollegepress.com for more from Log College Press.
Episodes
Monday Jan 16, 2023
Monday Jan 16, 2023
John Miller Wells - Southern Presbyterian Worthies: Daniel Baker, The Evangelist (1936) . . . Southern Presbyterian Worthies, by John Miller Wells, tells the stories of several pastors who ministered in the old Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS). This episode is a reading of his chapter on Daniel Baker, one of the greatest revival preachers of the 19th century. He pastored and preached across the country, and ended his life in Texas, laboring for the gospel of Jesus and the building of a college to train ministers of the gospel for Texas. Baker is a man who needs to be remembered, and Wells' brief biography wonderfully introduces us to this giant of evangelistic preaching.
Monday Dec 05, 2022
Monday Dec 05, 2022
John Miller Wells - Southern Presbyterian Worthies: John Leighton Wilson, The Foreign Missionary (1936) . . . Southern Presbyterian Worthies, by John Miller Wells, tells the stories of several pastors who ministered in the old Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS). This episode is a reading of his chapter on John Leighton Wilson, a foreign missionary in Africa, missionary statesman, and secretary/coordinator of foreign and home missions for the PCUS from 1861 until 1885. His story is one that has been forgotten, but he needs to be remembered as a man of faith and action who led the church of Jesus Christ to pursue the salvation of the lost to the four corners of the globe. (Typically, this podcast posts a picture of the author of the work read; in this case, the picture is actually of Wilson.)
Monday Oct 31, 2022
Archibald Alexander Hodge - The Day Changed and the Sabbath Preserved (1877)
Monday Oct 31, 2022
Monday Oct 31, 2022
Archibald Alexander Hodge - The Day Changed and the Sabbath Preserved (1877) . . . In this short tract, published the year he arrived at Princeton Seminary to assist his father Charles Hodge in teaching systematic theology, A. A. Hodge sets forth a clear biblical, theological, and historical case that the Lord's Day is the Christian Sabbath day, in spite of the change from the seventh day of the week to the first day.
Monday Oct 03, 2022
Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield - Imitating the Incarnation (1913)
Monday Oct 03, 2022
Monday Oct 03, 2022
Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield - Imitating the Incarnation (1913) . . . This sermon by "The Lion of Princeton" unfolds both the theology and the import of Paul's magisterial description of the selfless love of the eternal Son on God in Philippians 2:5-8. Warfield's provocative exposition is challenging on many levels, but in the end he will leave you longing to be more like Jesus is His self-giving sacrifice.
Saturday Sep 03, 2022
James Henley Thornwell - Antinomianism (1840)
Saturday Sep 03, 2022
Saturday Sep 03, 2022
James Henley Thornwell - Antinomianism (1840) . . . Thornwell was one of the most influential theologians in the 19th century American Presbyterian Church. This little piece was an appendix to a reprint of Robert Traill's classic work on justification, which Thornwell published as a tract. In it, Thornwell shows how the gospel is opposed to both legalism and lawlessness, and how justification and sanctification are linked together in the plan of salvation.
Saturday Jul 30, 2022
Daniel Dana - The Importance of Seriousness for a Minister (1840)
Saturday Jul 30, 2022
Saturday Jul 30, 2022
Daniel Dana - The Importance of Seriousness for a Minister (1840) . . .
Daniel Dana (1771-1859) was a Presbyterian pastor in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. This piece was originally an article in the American Quarterly Register. In it, Dana speaks to the reasons why a minister must be serious, the nature of a minister's seriousness, and the influence and effect of his seriousness. This topic is generally unknown in our day and age, thus it is well worth thirty minutes of your time.
Saturday Jul 02, 2022
Moses Drury Hoge - Portraitures of Four Pastors (1892)
Saturday Jul 02, 2022
Saturday Jul 02, 2022
Moses Drury Hoge - Portraitures of Four Pastors (1892) . . .
Moses Drury Hoge (1818-1899) delivered this biographical address on the eightieth anniversary of First Presbyterian Church in Richmond, Virginia, discussing briefly the lives of John Holt Rice, William Jessup Armstrong, William Swan Plumer, and Thomas Verner Moore.
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
A Conversation with Dr. John Fesko about Henry Boynton Smith
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
A Conversation with Dr. John Fesko about Henry Boynton Smith . . .
Caleb Cangelosi, the founder of Log College Press, interviews Dr. John Fesko (Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology at RTS in Jackson, MS) about the theology of Henry Boynton Smith (1815-1877), a New School theologian at Union Theological Seminary in New York. This interview was recorded on May 7, 2020, during the COVID lockdown.
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
A Conversation with Rev. Brian Peterson about Jonathan Dickinson
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
A Conversation with Rev. Brian Peterson about Jonathan Dickinson . . .
Caleb Cangelosi, the founder of Log College Press, interviews Rev. Brian Peterson (pastor of Surfside PCA in Myrtle Beach, SC) about the life and ministry of Jonathan Dickinson (1688-1747), one of the most significant early American Presbyterians. This interview was recorded on April 22, 2020, during the COVID lockdown.
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
John Gresham Machen - Christianity and Culture (1913)
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
Saturday Jun 25, 2022
John Gresham Machen - Christianity and Culture (1913) . . .
This article from Volume 11 of the Princeton Theological Review was originally an address on “The Scientific Preparation of the Minister”, delivered September 20, 1912, at the opening of the one hundred and first session of Princeton Theological Seminary, and in substance (previously) at a meeting of the Presbyterian Ministers’ Association of Philadelphia, May 20, 1912. John Gresham Machen (1881-1937) explores the relationship between piety and knowledge, or Christianity and culture, challenging the church to engage in the practice of consecration of culture to the Lord of all things rather than exalting either culture or Christianity to the destruction of the other.