Who Was Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones?
To the Doctor, Scripture was the supreme, authoritative guide to everything.
He was a “Bible Calvinist not a system Calvinist,” and, at a time in which the glorious doctrines of grace are being found by large generations of young people, the need to rediscover Martyn Lloyd-Jones increases in importance. Reformed doctrine is not something of historic interest alone, but is also profoundly relevant to how to... Continue Reading
How C. S. Lewis Predicted Today’s College Campus Craziness—in 1944
Lewis’s The "Abolition of Man" explains both the confusion and the radical ideology on campuses today, and how Americans should respond to these dire threats.
Modern education, Lewis warns, aims to produce “Men without Chests,” by which he means men and women with a deformed understanding of morality. Plato, Aristotle, and St. Augustine argued that the goal of education was to grow a young person’s conscience, so his moral understanding conformed to reality. “The little human animal will not at... Continue Reading
How To Baptize: The Mode
Biblically speaking, what is the proper mode of baptism?
Here’s how J. G. Vos explains it: “The mode of baptism is a matter of indifference. That is, the quantity of water to be used and the manner in which it is to be applied are not matters which have been appointed in Scripture. In the history of the church there have been three modes... Continue Reading
An Apostle To The Intellectuals
The author stands up boldly for Calvinism. But not all Christians will recognize her creed.
Any book written by Marilynne Robinson will sell, and that may be the problem. “The Givenness of Things” is billed as a collection of essays, but it consists preponderantly of discursive half-baked musings. Ms. Robinson prefaces one of her many inchoate ideas by admitting—I suppose in this case to her credit—“My thoughts on the subject... Continue Reading
Reviving the Black Church
A review of Thabiti Anyabwile’s Reviving The Black Church: A Call to Reclaim a Sacred Institution
Reviving the Black Church offers a robust biblical and theological exposition of how dead black churches can be made alive in Christ by the power of the Spirit and the preached Word, just like those dry bones in Ezekiel 37. But Reviving the Black Church isn’t just for the black church. Pastors and church leaders from a variety of... Continue Reading
Preaching the Whole Counsel of God
A review of Julius Kim's new book on designing and delivering gospel-centered sermons
Although this book is under 250 pages, there is a lot of information between the covers! I appreciated the section on the design and delivery of the sermon, where Kim gave 12 points on how the brain hears, retains, and listens to speaking. For example, since studies (and experience!) have shown the brain can only... Continue Reading
This Thanksgiving, Stop Idolizing the Pilgrims
A review of Robert Tracy McKenzie’s excellent book The First Thanksgiving
In The First Thanksgiving: What the Real Story Tells Us About Loving God and Learning from History, Robert Tracy McKenzie takes the historical challenges posed by the Pilgrims as his starting point. I cannot recall ever reading a book quite like The First Thanksgiving. It is an entertaining retelling of a seminal moment in American history—and a remarkable... Continue Reading
What Do We Do With the Imprecatory Psalms?
Ten helps from David Murray's Sing a New Song: Recovering Psalm Singing for the Twenty-First Century
Any Christian who has a high view of the normativity of all of Scripture (OT and NT) for the Christian church will wrestle with the language of cursing and imprecation found in the Psalms. Are we not called to love our enemies? How then can a Christian take such language upon his lips? Are not... Continue Reading
Challenging the Consensus Except When the Consensus Says You Shouldn’t
Much opposition to historical reliability of the biblical text comes not from critical engagement with the evidence, but from appeal to consensus
For our own part, we are already known by Grabbe not to be real scholars, even though we appear to behave as scholars in the way that we handle evidence…. In order to be real scholars, we must apparently also come to the “correct” conclusions. That is to say: we must come to Grabbe’s conclusions,... Continue Reading
Perhaps The Best Contemporary Worship Song Ever Written
In a day and age when most traditional churches exclusively sang psalms, Isaac Watts (1647-1748) became a fervent contemporary writer of hymns
Many of his hymns, which are now very traditional, have richly blessed the church. Perhaps none has been so beloved as his famous song written to assist men and women in preparing for the table of the Lord, “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross.” This hymn was based on the doctrine found in Galatians 6:14, “But far be... Continue Reading
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