
This is the third and final part of my interview with Mike Reeves.
Mike is the theological advisor for UCCF:The Christian Unions, the power behind the throne for Theology Network, and the author of The Unquenchable Flame: Introducing the Reformation (IVP). UK readers can get the book for the bargain price of £7.20 (that includes p & p) here. A US edition of the book will be out on 1st April 2010 and will be published by Broadman & Holman.
Downes: Some evangelicals and some Roman Catholics have worked toward joint agreements on justification. What do you think about this?
Reeves: I would love to see real  and peaceful agreement on justification between all who profess to be  Christian. And in that sense I admire and applaud the efforts of those  who have sought such unity. However. The simple fact is that while some  individual Roman Catholics have come round to what looks something like  a Reformation understanding of justification through faith alone, Rome’s  doctrinal position has not changed. 
Those statements that purport  to show true agreement on justification simply fudge the main Reformation  position, papering over the cracks that still remain between Rome and  the Reformation (typically, by vague wording and agreeing that justification  is by faith, but leaving out the key word ‘alone’). And if that  is the case, then evangelicals and Roman Catholics who think they have  come to a common agreement are deluding themselves. Oh, for Roman Catholics  and evangelicals to find true agreement on justification as a declaration,  made on the basis of God’s grace alone! But as things stand, that  agreement is yet to be found.
Downes: How should Christians and churches develop a passion for church history?
Reeves: Simply read good church history  and historical theology! There’s all sorts of wonderful stuff out  there: I put a list of further reading at the back of the book, and  there’s more to be found on the website (theunquenchableflame.org). But I’m so glad you asked the  question, because it’s moronic to cut ourselves off from the wisdom  and lessons of the bulk of the church. If we forget church history,  we just leave ourselves victim to our zeitgeist. In fact it’s for  just this reason that I’ve written another book, out in January. It’s  called The Breeze of the Centuries: Introducing Great Theologians  (IVP), and I’m hoping it can do something to rescue us from being  prisoners of our age. 
Downes: You say in the book that  the Reformation isn't over.  Why not?
 Reeves: You’re giving things away! But absolutely I think that, and essentially  because the Reformation was not a mere historical response to a problem  that has now gone away. The Puritans especially saw how easily the reforming  of the Church could go off-track or be forgotten, and how necessary  it is for the Church to remain ever a creature of the word of God. Sinners  need constant reformation by the gospel of God’s free grace, and that  was what the Reformation was all about. It cannot, then, be over.
But I think there is also  a particular and pressing need for the Reformation to continue today.  My fear is that right now in bible colleges and theological institutions,  future preachers are being bombarded with many confusing interpretations  of what Paul meant by justification and ‘the righteousness of God’.  And even if they are not lured away from what I am convinced is the  biblical truth of the main Reformation position, I worry that they will  come out confused. If that happens, then we will have a generation where  the pulpits are silent on the gospel of God’s gift of righteousness.  And thus the Church will wither terribly. 
Given that, today is a day of days when preachers must drink more deeply from Reformation waters and boldly hold out that gospel.
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