At Least Know Something about Those You Criticise
On actually reading and listening to your opponents.
We find so many cases of folks arguing for their position, but too often without any real understanding of what they are criticising or arguing against. By all means argue for what you believe, but at least make sure what you are attacking is what the other side actually has said or believes. It... Continue Reading
Foolosophy
We profess to know God, but we deny him with our works.
Foolish people have corrupted themselves and they do vile, rotten things. The fool says in his heart that there is no God. The psalmist observes that there are no good works among such people. This serves to emphasize how this practical atheism isn’t an intellectual problem, but a moral one. Humanity’s problem isn’t a lack... Continue Reading
What The Pro-Palestinian Campus Protests Are Really About
When protests are childish, inconsistent, racist, and rooted in no shared vision beyond that of mere negation, then those who participate in them should be treated with contempt.
The thing that unites these groups is neither concern for Arab lives nor a respect for Islamic culture. They are united only in wanting to tear down. In short, these protests are a manifestation of the Mephistophelean spirit of negation or, in religious terms, the spirit of desecration. To borrow from Marx, all that is... Continue Reading
Protecting Our Grandchildren—Or Not
It is personally costly to look beyond this decade, beyond this century, and consider how our extravagant choices will impact our descendants.
Without a doubt, the most serious way in which we are not protecting our descendants is with regard to financial irresponsibility. Our national debt is approaching 35 trillion dollars, representing a personal debt of $105,000 for every individual (adult, teen, child, toddler, and newborn) living in America. We are all in serious debt, and we... Continue Reading
Are Husbands and Wives Addressed in 1 Timothy 2:9–15?
Paul’s admonitions in 1 Tim. 2:9–15 refer to men and women in general and should not be restricted to husbands and wives.
When husbands and wives are intended, the context makes it clear, but there is nothing in the context of 1 Tim. 2:9–15 to indicate that husbands and wives are in view. Paul could have easily added words like “your wives” or “your husbands” to clarify that wives and husbands are intended, but we find nothing... Continue Reading
Paedo-Baptism, Yes; Paedo-Communion, No.
In principle, regeneration is possible before or during baptism, but active faith is not possible for the infant in communion.
At the time of administration, covenant infants are capable of the grace signified by baptism (Jer. 1:5; Luke 1:15; John 3:8), but not the grace signified by communion. So, even though we confess that “the efficacy of baptism is not tied to that moment of time wherein it is administered” (WCF 28:6), the signification of... Continue Reading
The Nature of the American Regime
Rightly understanding our political situation is the first step.
There is good reason that the Right—along with increasing numbers of Americans—is distrustful of our public institutions, some of which need to be razed and some of which need to be rejuvenated. For many Americans, bromides against the “tyrannical government” and talk of “creeping Marxism” is not simply a product of their own populist delusions... Continue Reading
Encore: Sealed with Blood: Missions, Confessions, and Keeping the Faith
The Belgic Confession provides a model for vital Christian belief with the goal of building healthy churches in a non-Christian context, and De Brès sealed this document with his own blood.
The Belgic Confession was intended to serve as a discipleship tool, as all confessions were. Beyond the governing authorities, De Brès also had in mind those Reformed Christians who suffered immense persecution. He and other Reformed pastors worked tirelessly to disciple and equip their flocks to do the work of ministry, and the confession was... Continue Reading
The Great Man and the Local Church
The true story happens when the church gathers as God’s local community here and there, near and far, week by week.
If the ordinary believers in your church and mine were to stop mentoring the people they see each and every Sunday, the church would be devastated. The most crucial work of ministry has little to do with “out there” in the wider Christian world and everything to do with “in here” in the local church.... Continue Reading
Is Your Church Slow Enough?
The Church isn’t in a hurry. Neither should Christians be.
The typical question immediately after you’ve preached is a good starting point, it’s good that people have them, but the questions I really love are the ones that have nothing to do with what I was talking about. That means it’s sat with someone as they’ve thought about it over some time. Last Sunday (as... Continue Reading
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