Tim Keller Biography
Tim Keller born “Timothy J. Keller” is an American pastor, theologian, and Christian apologist. He is well known as the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, New York.
Tim Keller Age
He was born on 23rd of September in 1950 in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He is 68 years old as of 2018.
Tim Keller Familly
There is no information of him about his early life, his parents and how he was raised up being updated as of now.
Tim Keller Wife
He is Married to his wife Kathy.
Tim Keller Children
The pair has three grown sons, David, Michael, and Jonathan.
Tim Keller Education
He received his D.Min in 1981, under the supervision of Harvie M. Conn. He later became a Christian while at Bucknell University, due to the ministry of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, with which he later served as a staff member.
He was ordained by the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA) and served as a pastor at West Hopewell Presbyterian Church in Hopewell, Virginia for nine years while serving as director of church planting for the PCA. He as well served on the faculty of Westminster Theological Seminary, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he and his wife Kathy were involved in urban ministry.
Tim Keller Career – Tim Keller Ministry
He is described as a “C.S. Lewis for the 21st Century”, he disavows comparisons to his hero. He as well draws on secular or academic sources like The New York Times, and media coverage has treated him as an anomaly: a pastor who appeals to Manhattan yuppies and intellectuals.
The Redeemer Presbyterian Church is said to have grown from 50 people to a total attendance of over 5,000 people every Sunday Sunday as of 2008, making him be “the most successful Christian Evangelist in the city.” In 2004 Christianity Today praised Redeemer as “one of Manhattan’s most vital congregations”.
The church’s emphasis on young urban professionals, whom Keller believes exhibit disproportionate influence over the culture and its ideas, He has given the church an unusual view for a US megachurch. A good number of the members of the congregation is made up of single adults; it as well as over forty percent Asian-American and has many congregants working in the arts and financial services. In his preaching, He often critiques both political parties and avoids taking public stances on political issues, resulting in a politically centrist church.
The Church has as well-founded Hope for New York, a non-profit organization that sends volunteers and grants to over 40 faith-based ministries serving social needs in New York City, being the Center for Faith and Work to train professionals in Christian theology, and Redeemer City to City to train and fund pastors in New York and other cities. He is a co-founder of The Gospel Coalition, a group of Reformed leaders from around the United States.
He later stepped down from his role as senior pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church on 1st of July in 2017. His move was part of a larger vision to shift his efforts from preaching to training the next generation of church leaders and starting new churches in global cities through Redeemer City to City.
Tim Keller Books -Tim Keller Preaching Book – Tim Keller Author
He is known to have authored The New York Times bestselling books,
- Resources for Deacons: Love Expressed through Mercy Ministries (Christian Education and Publications, 1985)
- Ministries of Mercy: The Call of the Jericho Road (P&R Publishing, 1997)
- Church Planter Manual (Redeemer Presbyterian Church, 2002)
- The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism (Dutton Adult, February 2008)
- The Prodigal God: Recovering the Heart of the Christian Faith (Dutton Adult, November 2008)
- Counterfeit Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power, and the Only Hope that Matters (Dutton Adult, October 2009)
- Generous Justice: How God’s Grace Makes Us Just (Dutton Adult, November 2010)
- King’s Cross: The Story of the World in the Life of Jesus (Dutton Adult, February 2011)
- The Meaning of Marriage: Facing the Complexities of Commitment with the Wisdom of God (Dutton Adult, November 2011)
- The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness: The Path to True Christian Joy (10Publishing, March 2012)
- Center Church: Doing Balanced, Gospel-Centered Ministry in Your City (Zondervan, September 2012)
- Every Good Endeavor: Connecting Your Work to God’s Work (Dutton, November 2012)
- Galatians For You (The Good Book Company, February 2013)
Judges For You (The Good Book Company, August 2013) - Walking with God through Pain and Suffering (Dutton, October 2013)
- Encounters with Jesus: Unexpected Answers to Life’s Biggest Questions (Dutton, 2013)
- Romans 1-7 For You (The Good Book Company, February 2014)
- Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God (Dutton, 2014)
- Center Church Europe (Wijnen, Uitgeverij Van, 2014) Contributors are José de Segovia, Leonardo De Chirico, Michael Herbst, Frank Hinkelmann, Martin de Jong, Jens Bruun Kofoed, Daniel Liechti, András Lovas, David Novak, Stefan Paas, and Martin Reppenhagen. ISBN
- Romans 8-16 For You (The Good Book Company, February 2015)
- Preaching: Communicating Faith in an Age of Skepticism (Viking, June 2015)
- The Songs of Jesus: A Year of Daily Devotionals in the Psalms (Viking, November 2015)
- Making Sense of GOD: An Invitation to the Skeptical Viking
- Hidden Christmas: The Surprising Truth Behind the Birth of Christ (Viking, Nov 2016)
- God’s Wisdom for Navigating Life: A Year of Daily Devotions in the Book of Proverbs (Viking, Nov 2017)
- The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God’s Mercy (Viking, Oct 2018)
Tim Keller Net Worth
His networth and salary estimation has not been updated as of now.
Tim Keller Theology
He shuns the label “evangelical” because of its political and fundamentalist connotation, He calls himself as an orthodox because “he believes in the importance of personal conversion or being ‘born again,’ and the full authority of the Bible.” He as well identifies with Reformed Theology, although he receives critics from some in that tradition for his modern interpretation of its doctrines. He has been described as a “doctrine-friendly emerging pastor” and a “neo-Calvinist.”
Tim Keller The Gospel versus religion:
His ministry has been teaching the doctrine of the gospel, emphasizing the doctrines of total depravity, unmerited grace, and substitutionary atonement. He as well emphasizes and summarizes in his oft-used explanation,
“The gospel is this: We are more sinful and flawed in ourselves than we ever dared believe, yet at the very same time we are more loved and accepted in Jesus Christ than we ever dared hope.” Understanding of the gospel is contrasted to what Keller calls “traditional religion” as well as “irreligion” with this he has been referred to as a “gospel third way,” or “gospel-centered” approach.
Typical of this teaching is his interpretation of the Parable of the Prodigal Son, based on a teaching of one of Keller’s mentors, Edmund Clowney.
Tim Keller Forgiveness – Apologetics
He preaches and has also authored in his apologetics is characterized by a respectful orientation towards an educated and skeptical audience outside the faith. His most explicit work on the subject is The Reason for God. which he attributes to thousands of conversations with skeptical New Yorkers over the course of his ministry.
He has also written over the loss of a Christian culture in the West, including in the academic and cultural establishments, and the need for Christians to contextualize to the current secular and anti-religious cultural climate.
On creationism, he relates his view is not strictly literal and that evolution is “neither ruled in nor ruled out” in his church. he has written on the topic for the BioLogos Foundation. His major influences in apologetics include C.S. Lewis, Cornelius Van Til, John Stott, Alvin Plantinga, and Miroslav Volf.
Tim Keller Idolatry
He as well teaches on idolatry, based on teachings of Martin Luther and John Calvin, and on the Ten Commandments and other parts of the Bible. He states that contemporary idol worship continues today in the form of an addiction or devotion to money, career, sex, power, and anything people seek to give significance and satisfaction in life other than God
Social justice and politics – Tim Keller Politics
He disavows the “social gospel” of which has characterized Mainline Protestant churches, which advocates liberal political causes and de-emphasizes the doctrines of sin and substitutionary sacrifice. However he has argued for giving to charitable causes and caring for the needs of the poor based on biblical texts. He has criticized both the conservative and liberal politics for having a reductionistic view of the poor.
Cultural engagement
He has been a leader in applying Christian theology to secular vocations such as business, art, and entrepreneurship. The Center for Faith and Work at Redeemer has sponsored business competitions and theological education for working professionals.
His views on Christianity and culture are outlined in his books Every Good Endeavor and Center Church. He is an avid fan of the work of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, both well-known Christian authors, and also supports the Harry Potter novels which have been considered pagan by certain conservative Christians.
Sex and gender
Keller has a complementarian view of gender that believes that the Bible teaches defined roles for both genders, but the specific duties accompanying each gender’s role is undefined.
He believes that “Marriage provides the personal growth that comes through cross-gender relationships.” He as well elaborates on the biblical view of sex and marriage in his book The Meaning of Marriage. Keller is a signatory of the Manhattan Declaration and is opposed to abortion, but is not opposed to contraception.
Cities and urban church planting
While at Westminster Theological Seminary, Keller was mentored by Harvie Conn, an early advocate of ministry in urban centers, and was recruited to start Redeemer Presbyterian Church due to a shortage of biblically orthodox churches in center-city Manhattan.
He was then a worldwide spokesman for the need to create new kinds of churches in urban centers to address rapid urbanization. He went on delivering a plenary address on the subject at the Lausanne Conference of 2010.
He has mentored and chaired a network of center-city churches that represents similar ministry values worldwide. He has authors extensively on the importance of cities and gives a biblical-theological framework for ministry in cities in his book on ministry, Center Church.
Tim Keller Podcast
- A Christian’s Happiness
- 1 Corinthians 6-7
- Greed: The Case of the Rich Young Ruler
- Everyone with a Gift
- Lord of the Earth
- A Covenant Relationship
- Beholding the Love of God
- The Jealousy of God
- The basis of Prayer: “Our Father”
- Come and See Song of Creation
- Friendship
- The Inside Out Kingdom
- Adoration: Hallowed Be Thy Name
- Accepting the Judge
- Abraham and the Torch
- A World of Idols
- A Woman, a Slave and a Gentile
- A Spirit Hath Not Flesh and Bones
- A Promise of Hope
Tim Keller Church
He worships at The Redeemer family of churches and ministries that exist to help build a great city for all people through a movement of the gospel that brings personal conversion, community formation, social justice, and cultural renewal to New York City and, through it, the world.
Tim Keller Romans
“Perhaps the most wonderful part of the book of Romans for me is in Romans chapter 8, where it summarizes how you change from the inside out—how you change deeply.”
Adopted from www.bible.com
Tim Keller Trump
He admits that a perceived conflating of evangelical Christianity and Republican Party politics has fuelled cynicism among non-believers. He as well agrees that old Premier’s Inspirational Breakfast programme: “The sceptic wants to believe… that Christianity is just another political party – that, really, everybody is in it for power – and so it just plays into their hands “the sceptic”.”That’s, I think, one of the reasons it’s harder to be an evangelical Christians: it’s [more difficult] just trying to share their faith.”
A survey tahe was done and published by the Public Religion Research Institute in April found support among white evangelicals for Donald Trump stood at 75 per cent, compared to 42 per cent among all Americans. Keller,wen on stepping down last summer from the Redeemer Presbyterian Church he was leading in New York City, said a perception of politicisation with the Church can turn people away.
He added that: “There’s been a danger everywhere in the West where a church becomes so identified with the political power – that always is alienating to a lot of people
“The high number of white evangelicals who have identified with Donald Trump and the Republican Party, that’s a stronger political identification that’s [sic] ever happened in my lifetime.”Asked about his future plans, the 67-year-old said he is exploring how he might be able to spend more time with non-believers.
Tim Keller Twitter
Tim Keller Instagram
Tim Keller Facebook
Tim Keller Youtube – Tim Keller Sermons Youtube
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