Has Grief Led You to Apathy?
Grief is a normal part of life because loss is normal.
Apathy can also be a sign that the process of grief has not run its course.7 Grief is about coping with loss. Gerald Sittser, an insightful guide on these issues, writes, “Loss creates a barren present, as if one were sailing on a vast sea of nothingness. Those who suffer loss live suspended between a past... Continue Reading
Is It Anti-woman to Be Anti-abortion?
Abortion advocates try to rewrite the history of feminism.
The distinctive contribution of ‘Pity For Evil’, however, is that feminism need not be understood as synonymous with pro-abortion politics. A more historically rooted feminism grounds the value and dignity of women in their capacity for virtue and care, not in their ability to mimic male sexual appetites. In spite of the lip service paid to... Continue Reading
The Most Noble Profession
In praise of homemaking and motherhood.
“Once upon a time there was a man so surly and cross, he never thought his wife did anything right around the house. One evening, during hay-making time, he came home complaining that dinner wasn’t on the table, the baby was crying, and the cow had not been put in the barn. “I work and... Continue Reading
How Can We See A Return To The Bible?
A review of “How Can We See A Return To The Bible?” by D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
“We do not come to the Bible to discover whether it is true; we come to discover its meaning and its teaching, and therefore I say the only hope is that we preach its message to the people. We must preach it to them as the Word of God.” How Can We See A... Continue Reading
Moral Education and Story Telling
The Moral Compass: Stories for a Life’s Journey – Another must read-volume by Bennett.
The book again features hundreds of stories, poems and essays – some well-known, some not so much. It again features biblical and non-biblical material, Christian and non-Christian material. Again, each chapter is arranged from the easier to the harder material. And again, both children and parents will benefit greatly from all the great reading found... Continue Reading
Calvin’s Political Theology Revisited
Honest Reformation Scholarship Leads to an Unmistakable Conclusion
Calvin’s Political Theology, authored by Matthew J. Tuininga, currently Associate Professor of Christian Ethics and the History of Christianity at Calvin Theological Seminary. Tuininga makes his objective clear from the beginning: “[Calvin’s political theological perspective] offers us the theological resources to reject the ideal of Christendom, in which all citizens are expected to worship and... Continue Reading
“Losing Our Religion” and the Fracturing of American Evangelicalism
Book Review: In addition to elements of memoir, jeremiad, lament, and indictment, the book includes Moore’s wisdom and counsel for persevering through a challenging season.
Losing Our Religion is a complicated book, and readers will find much to agree and disagree with, as I did. It offers a fascinating, personal, raw, and at times puzzling look into our recent and ongoing struggles with faith, politics, culture, and loving—or at least co-existing with—our neighbors. Around twenty years ago as a... Continue Reading
Jesus Calling, “PCA, Lament and Repent!”
Jesus Calling is a problematic book. It came from the Presbyterian Church in America.
We failed to care sufficiently for her soul, and to exercise authority within our delineated jurisdiction for the preservation and promulgation of the true gospel and true religion. It cannot be underlined too boldly: criticism of Sarah Young or commiseration because of her actual aims and intentions– all of it bundled together pales to the... Continue Reading
Seven Facts about Abortion
In a free and just society, crimes against anyone must be illegal for everyone.
Consider the monument of lady justice. She is often displayed with a blindfold. Why? Because true justice must be blind to the person being tried. To put it in biblical terminology, “God is no respecter of persons” (Acts 10:34). She has open and equal balances in her right hand, for “divers weights and divers measures,... Continue Reading
Treasuring the Psalms: A Review
If I teach the Psalms again in a classroom or church setting, I will use this textbook. And I will regularly recommend it.
During his exegesis of Psalm 110, Vaillancourt rightly pointed to the uniqueness of the psalm in which YHWH addresses David’s Lord. Given the psalm’s central use in trinitarian theology in the early centuries of the Church and its insight into an intra-trinitarian conversation (between the Father and Son), I wish he spent a bit of... Continue Reading
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