Something to Hate
While hate is a strong word, it is a necessary word.
It is necessary to speak the truth about what is evil. We need to use it to think about, talk about, and act against sin. In doing so, it will help us see sin for what it is: an affront against a holy, perfect, and righteous God. Hating sin helps us take it seriously. It... Continue Reading
Believers Are Not Out On Bail
The good news is that Christ fulfilled the covenant of works for us and that fulfillment is ours by faith alone.
We are not nervously awaiting a final adjudication. We are not on probation. Our salvation is not provisional. It is not retained nor maintained nor continued by good works. It is “apart from the works of the law.” Give thanks today and seek to grow in sanctity and in consequent love and good works not... Continue Reading
The Very Heart of the Reformation
How can an unjust person ever be justified in the presence of a righteous and holy God?
When we say that the Reformation view of justification is synthetic, we mean that when God declares a person to be just in His sight, it is not because of what He finds in that person under His analysis. Rather, it is on the basis of something that is added to the person. That something... Continue Reading
Replacement Theology or Inclusion Theology?
The church doesn’t replace Israel. The church IS Israel as God always intended it to be.
I believe that what we see in the NT isn’t the replacement of Israel but an expanded definition of who Israel is. During the time of the old testament one was an Israelite (primarily) because one was a physical, biological descendant of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. One’s ethnicity was the deciding factor. But with the coming of... Continue Reading
He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not
When God showed his love for sinners, it was rated R.
The gospel has a far better word for us than our fickle feelings: The Light of the world was snuffed; the Bread of life, broken; the King of kings, executed; the Lamb of God, slain; the Son of Man, tortured; the Son of God, forsaken; the Rock of ages, stricken; the blood of Christ, shed: Oh, how... Continue Reading
The Marks of a Healthy Church: The Great Commission
The relationship that began with ‘Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men’ (Mt 4.19), has now come of age, as Jesus tells the disciples to ‘Go…!’
The precise wording of the Great Commission is significant. Even though, at least for those who only read it in English translation, it would be tempting to think the ‘command’ component of what Jesus says is to ‘Go!’, the imperative in this clause is actually to ‘make disciples’. The ‘going’ is presented in a present... Continue Reading
Accommodating Rome?
Might there have been a Lutheran order within the Roman church if the pope was more sophisticated and skillful?
Christians who adhered to sola scriptura – the authority of Scripture alone – could never endure a papacy that demanded that its tradition stood beside (and in practice above) the plain meaning of Scripture. Moreover, by study of the Bible, the Protestants came to the conclusion that the papacy was an utterly illegitimate and usurping office. ... Continue Reading
Sola Scriptura Then and Now
Sola scriptura is no mere slogan, a creedal point to be checked off with approval from a list.
Either Scripture establishes what the gospel is, calls people back to the gospel, and transforms God’s people with his Spirit-anointed gospel truth, shaping them into conformity with his Son, or it is but an empty boast. Sadly, some affirm sola scriptura in a sloganeering way, but rarely read Scripture and never meditate on it; or, worse yet, they thoughtlessly defy it.... Continue Reading
Comfort For The Sheep From Calvin
Despite Believer's Lack of Sufficient Good Works - "We Shall Not Cease To Be Acceptable To God"
In the sermon excerpt below, Calvin informs his congregation that not only believer’s sins of commission (doing the things we shouldn’t) have been imputed to Christ and therefore ‘abolished by the obedience of our Lord Jesus Christ’ but also our sins of omission, i.e. the good works we should have done but didn’t! Calvin writes, ‘If we... Continue Reading
Conversations through 95 Theses – Does Sufficiency Necessitate Competency?
Does the fact that the Bible is authoritative and sufficient mean that every well-meaning believer with a Bible is competent for counseling?
In Dr. Lambert’s 95 Theses, I could find acknowledgment that not all biblical counselors are skilled (Theses 27 and 28). What I could not find was the subsequent acknowledgment of the possibility that a non-biblical counselor who is more skilled with a lesser tool may be more effective for some individuals than an unskilled biblical counselor with a superior... Continue Reading