Judge Not Lest Ye Be Judged By Your Own Crippling Standard
It’s one of the most misused, misquoted, misunderstood verses in the Bible.
Compassionate judgment seeks to stay faithful to Scripture while also truly loving the person who struggles. It strives to identify the speck in someone else’s eye while simultaneously trying to rip the log out of my own. Jesus didn’t say, “Judge not lest ye be judged,” in order to make us meek and mild people who... Continue Reading
What Is Semi-Pelagianism?
Semi-Pelagianism results in a rejection of God’s grace in favor of man’s innate goodness, however small a spark of goodness it is.
Semi-Pelagianism took a middle-of-the-road approach to depravity; we are depraved, but not totally so. Semi-Pelagianism allows that humanity is tainted by sin, but not to the extent that we cannot cooperate with God’s grace on our own. Semi-Pelagianism is, in essence, partial depravity as opposed to total depravity. We are sinful, but we can still... Continue Reading
Glorification
The Bible looks to a final chapter in the story of redemption called "glorification"
“If you’re a Christian, your death won’t be the end of your story. You will pass into the presence of God, and you will know complete peace and joy, but that still will not be the end. The story only truly ends when Christ’s Easter resurrection victory is fully experienced by all of creation, both... Continue Reading
Disagreeing With George Muller Is Not a Sin
George Muller provided a great example to follow — especially in the area of prayer
“Today, many years after George Muller’s death, the Trust in his name continues to maintain the same principle of prayer as the only means whereby they will ask for money. While we can look to George Muller and be grateful for his strong faith, it would be unwise to demean another fellow Christian for making... Continue Reading
Thankful for Stumbling
Do you find yourself still dancing to the world’s tunes? Be careful, you might stumble over Jesus one too many times, and never dance again.
This passage caused a blessed stumbling in me this morning. I worry too much for those who aren’t taking Jesus seriously. Yeah, I worry for some of those to whom I am witnessing. But the ones I fret over are those who’ve professed “Amen, Jesus my Lord,” and yet often do not even struggle with... Continue Reading
Handling the Hard Passages, Part 1
We need to invest time and effort into grappling with these passages
First, we need to have the right goal in dealing with these “hard” passages. We do not want to merely show that a doctrine is not that bad. We can’t have an attitude like, “eat your vegetables because they’re healthy for you even though they’re disgusting.” We don’t want to say, “Well, this doctrine is... Continue Reading
Instilling Gratitude in Your Family
Discontent and entitlement are strong pressures, but there are still ways to cultivate gratitude in your home.
Discontentment is easily triggered in us because we have an underlying sense of entitlement. We believe that we are inherently deserving of privileges or special treatment. I deserve that new electronic device, or that vacation, or peace and quiet when I come home after working all day. Entitlement justifies whatever self-focused response pours out of... Continue Reading
Studying the Confession: The Doctrine of Decree
The Westminster Confession of Faith serves to give substance to one’s profession of trust in the Bible as God’s Word.
If there is one doctrine for which Calvinism or Reformed theology is best known, it is election or predestination. That is what this chapter of the WCF is all about. It is included in the confession because, quite frankly, God has included teaching about the eternal decree in his Word. One of the landmark... Continue Reading
We Are All Eleventh-Hour Laborers
We are all eleventh-hour laborers; we need to learn to be thankful for all God gives to us and not begrudge blessings He gives to others.
The parable of the laborers in the vineyard, however, teaches us that not only our salvation, but also our entire Christian lives are to be lived on the basis of God’s grace. Then the parable also teaches us about two amazing qualities of grace: the abundant generosity of His grace, and His sovereignty in dispensing it.... Continue Reading
The Resurrection, Piety, and Pietism
The life of communion leads to a rich personal and corporate piety and devotion but it begins with the objective truths of the faith
I am advocating a return to the biblical theology, piety, and practice that we confess in the Reformed and Presbyterian churches, which piety is built around the divinely ordained means of grace. The Lord used the preaching of the Apostles to bring his elect to new life and true faith and through faith to union with... Continue Reading