Shotgun Cohabitation
Unwed couples who get pregnant are more likely to move in together than to get married
Considering other statistics, this mentality shift is unsurprising. According to another NCHS survey from the same period, almost 90 percent of married men and women claim to have had premarital sex, and about 50 percent of men and women say they have cohabited with a partner of the opposite sex. In response to the statement,... Continue Reading
America’s Moral Foundation
Review of ‘Slavery, Abortion, and the Politics of Constitutional Meaning’
Undoubtedly, there are differences between slavery and abortion. But the parallels are chilling. Dyer’s book shows that America today is rehashing much of the same debate that occurred 150 years ago. Running throughout the book is a sense of the moral foundation of America’s constitutional order. The Constitution is not just a document that sets... Continue Reading
Antinomianism
A review of Mark Jones' book: Antinomianism: Reformed Theology's Unwelcome Guest?
His insights concerning Christology are worth the price of admission. I had connected antinomianism with a truncated view of grace, but I had not taken it back one further step to Christology. Antinomians do have a truncated view of grace. God’s grace is saving me not only from sin’s guilt in justification, but also from... Continue Reading
Pastor Rick Warren:
The pastor aims to build a healthy congregation with a new diet book
The book, released in December, provides a meal plan that includes lean protein, fruit, vegetables and whole grains, and it encourages regular exercise. The day after a two-hour rally to kick off the plan at Saddleback, he says local grocery stores were out of vegetables. “That’s the power of a congregation,” he says. “When an... Continue Reading
Christian Movie Theme Song’s Oscar Nod Befuddles Hollywood Elite
Well-known Christian author, speaker, and quadriplegic Joni Eareckson-Tada performs the song, which combines the characteristics of an old spiritual and a modern hymn.
Mainstream media outlets erupted in confusion and indignation Thursday over a surprise Oscar nomination for Best Song. “Alone Yet Not Alone,” the theme song for an independent Christian film of the same name, edged out a long list of songs by mainstream artists and will face off against the likes of U2 and Pharrell Williams, as well... Continue Reading
Out with the Old?
There’s nothing necessarily wrong with reading the new books, but new isn’t always best.
And so, even now I find myself needing to be prepared to give an answer when someone tells me about this great, new book they read, Jesus Calling. (I’m not reviewing Jesus Calling here, but here are some good reviews by Todd Pruitt, Michael Horton, Kathy Keller, and Tim Challies if you are interested.) This book was published in 2004, but now there... Continue Reading
Is Theology Theoretical or Practical?
True theology is “mixed,” partly theoretical and partly practical
Turretin tackles a question first broached by the medieval Scholastics: is theology theoretical or practical? From our vantage point, the answer seems obvious. Theology must be practical. It must result in faith and obedience. It must bear fruit. The great problem in our day, we think, is that so much of our theological discourse has... Continue Reading
What Would Polygamy Do to Society?
With marriage being defined as "intense emotional connection," the next step of polygamy is only a small push away.
Polygamy didn’t turn out well in the Bible (just ask Jacob and Solomon), and it wouldn’t turn out well today. It fails because it’s not what we were designed for. Why on earth would we want to go back to it? In an attempt to combat polygamy in their state, Utah’s bigamy law not only criminalized multiple marriage... Continue Reading
The Divided Mind of the Black Church: Theology, Piety and Public Witness
A review of Raphael G. Warnock’s latest book on the Black church.
(Warnock) wants to hold together what he calls “the memory of Jesus” with the “distinctive resonance [that occurs] when the church is one built by slaves and formed, from its beginning, at the center of an oppressed community’s fight for personhood and freedom.” He’s not writing abstractly or without regard for context. He’s attempting to... Continue Reading
Spurgeon’s Standards for Conversion and Membership
The Prince of Preachers believed in protecting the door of membership to the church.
Spurgeon was adamant that the door to the church be well-guarded, and had a carefully-developed system whereby converts applying for membership were graciously but robustly assessed by elders, himself, and the whole congregation. I hope that I will be able at some point to provide a review of Tom Nettles’ excellent volume, Living for Revealed... Continue Reading
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