Faith with a Backbone
Faith with a backbone comes from the word of God, and faith with a backbone is centered on the word about Christ!
God has gifted you with faith in the Captain of your salvation, Jesus Christ (Heb 2:10). His sinless life, His death on the cross, and His glorious resurrection are the only things that can uphold you on that day of dread and gladness. A faith in anything else has no backbone and is empty. Only... Continue Reading
Who Was Herman Bavinck?
He was a theologian or dogmatician—one who thinks and writes about God and all things in His light according to God’s own revelation in the Bible.
The most important label—one that cries out for acknowledgment from the thousands of pages of his mighty corpus—is follower of Jesus. Bavinck loved the God who saved him by grace, and amid the complexity and brilliance of his thought, there is always a doxological current. As Bavinck put it: A theologian is a person who... Continue Reading
You’re Romantic Whether You Know It or Not
How and When We Became Romantic
One of the finest expressions of Romanticism today is Donna Tartt’s prize-winning novel The Goldfinch. Published in 2013 to critical acclaim and commercial success, it is a classic Bildungsroman in which a teenage boy, grief-stricken by the death of his mother, follows his emotions into a series of increasingly unwise decisions, complex relationships, and the criminal underworld.... Continue Reading
Christian Vocation Disrupts the Culture
Vocation as exiles calls Christians to disrupt a culture of self-interest with sacrificial, self-giving love by leveraging skills and resources in partnership with others, for God’s glory and the good of all.
Navigating the tension of vocation in exile involves a loving sensitivity and some amount of nuance but must always remain anchored in God’s vision for human flourishing, unswayed by cultural tides. Embodying and expressing this vision requires courageous, loving resistance. And part of resisting is remaining rather than retreating. This has been God’s plan for... Continue Reading
A Counter Catechism: What the Apostles’ Creed Denies
“Counter-Catechesis” is important to equip Christians to know what they ought not believe, given their Christian convictions in a hostile world.
[Christ] suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. He descended into Hell. Because we believe that Jesus was a personal actor in space-time history, we deny that his death was merely symbolic. He suffered an unjust conviction and was crucified by the Roman authorities, who knew how to execute people effectively. We... Continue Reading
The Exultant Nature of Today’s Abortion Advocacy
The glee with which abortion is advocated and the anger that any restrictions upon it provoke indicate that we need a different category to capture our current cultural ethos.
When abortion advocates dehumanize the baby in the womb, they dehumanize themselves too. Ours is an age when so much of our culture encourages us to treat others made in God’s image as less than human. This is true, from the comparatively trivial trashing of others that is the favored idiom of those who seem... Continue Reading
Serial Killing Christians?
Murder begins with disordered passions.
A Christian repents murdering others with their attitude and sass and picks up the cleaver to begin murdering the sin that caused it. A Christian is the one who picks up the bayonet and goes to war, as Romans 8:13 says, not one who continually succumbs to their hostilities and rage. Here is what I... Continue Reading
20 Biblical Motivations for Pursuing Holiness
We pursue godliness because Jesus is coming back again in great power.
We must take Christlikeness seriously right now because we do not know when the Lord will return (2 Pet. 3:10). We pursue holiness because all our works will be exposed on the last day (2 Pet. 3:10). We pursue holiness because whatever we live for in this life will be burned up and dissolved (2... Continue Reading
In the ARP: Crisis of Conscience, Not Constitution
The Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church is one of the oldest Presbyterian denominations in the U.S. At its June meeting the General Synod voted overwhelmingly to dissolve Second Presbytery, effective September 1, 2024.
We remain firmly Presbyterian in polity, with the highest court being the General Synod. What seems to be at the center of this confusion is a short phrase in the new FOG “in order to:” That phrase indicates that the synod has the authority to do those things (organize, receive, divide, dissolve, etc.). And that... Continue Reading
When I Am Weak, Then I Am Strong
The greater our awareness of our own weakness, the greater opportunity we have to lean on Christ.
For in the world, strength is measured by our ability to do things on our own. By ourselves. By our own intelligence or ingenuity or physical presence. Those are the truly strong people in the world. But here again we find another irony, because even those considered, in the eyes of the world, to be... Continue Reading
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 67
- 68
- 69
- 70
- 71
- …
- 3393
- Next Page »