The Need for Creeds
It's more than merely helpful to set down the church's core convictions in words
Every Christian and every church already has a creed in the sense that they all “think the Bible means something and that its teaching can be summarized” in different words. “The only difference is whether one writes the confession down, so that others may scrutinize it and judge whether its teaching is consistent with Scripture,... Continue Reading
KnockTV Announces Groundbreaking Christian Reality Television Series
Storyline About Five Women Healing From Their Past Abortions
KnockTV is an emerging leader in a new category of Christian television. This new Internet television network will make SURRENDER THE SECRET available on computers, mobile and handheld devices, on-demand (24 hours a day - 7 days a week) once an episode is released on the network’s website.
Of Cardboard Boxes and Moving Vans
A Review of Rebecca VanDoodewaard’s 'Uprooted''
VanDoodewaard’s tone is gracious, but she is not tentative in pointing out the sins that often accompany homesickness: grumbling, laziness, bitterness, discontent. And, in a refreshingly counter-cultural perspective, she admonishes readers to “exert yourself in controlling your emotions” (p. 45,) freely acknowledging that how we feel is our responsibility.
Seven Notes from “Lincoln”
Seeing how (Lincoln) brought to pass the 13th amendment felt a little like a punch in the gut.
All thinking, godly men and women know that it is sinful to own another person and mistreat them for one's own advantage. Yet I think that with God's guidance a better solution could have been found than to purchase "freedom" with 700,000 souls.
Should We Believe the Intellectuals? A Review of ‘The Anointed: Evangelical Truth in a Secular Age’
Should it be: “Secular intellectuals say it, I believe it, and that settles it.”
If Stephens and Giberson’s book is supposed to encourage us evangelicals to become more intellectual and engage the ideas of our secular culture, I suspect that in most cases it will backfire. For many evangelicals the book will serve as an object lesson in the dangers of compromising with “secular knowledge.” It might make them... Continue Reading
The Counterintuitive Calvin
The "Institutes" are, I think, the greatest, deepest, and most extensive treatment of the grace of God I have ever read
When Calvin comes to his well-known doctrine of predestination, it is important to see where he places it. He does not deal with the doctrine under Book 1 where he treats God, or even Book 2 where he addresses sin and Christ. He waits until Book 3, which is about "How We Receive the Grace of Christ" through the Holy Spirit. Calvin insists that the opposite of the doctrine of predestination is not the idea of free will but the teaching that we are saved by our good works.
After Seeing Lincoln, I Wanted to Sit in Stunned, Reflective Silence
After seeing Schindler’s List and after seeing Lincoln, I hated the evil in the world. I marveled at the courage of people who stand up for good
I know people respond differently to art and I’m sure this will be true of Lincoln. (9% of Rotten Tomatoes critics have given it a “rotten” review, for reasons I cannot fathom.) But, for me, watching this film was not just enjoyable and engaging, but also stunning and transformational.
When the Gospel Invades Your Office: Tim Keller on Faith and Work
Since all callings are from God, and all human callings get God's work done, that they all have equal dignity --M. Luther
At one point in my ministry here I regularly visited my members at their workplace---either eating lunch with them in their office or just going by to see them there. Usually these visits had to be brief---20 to 30 minutes. But this made it possible to learn quite a lot about their work-issues and the environment in which they spent so much of their time.
Inerrancy and the Gospels by Vern Poythress; A Review
Is another book on the harmonization of the Gospels really needed?
Inerrancy and the Gospels is a treasure trove of theological wisdom. Readers will find that Poythress sprinkles theological and exegetical insights onto almost every page, which makes reading this book a joyful task. For example, Poythress offers apt advice on the synoptic problem when he states that “the meaning of a discourse . . . consists in what it says, not in the history of its origin". Therefore “we do not have to solve the synoptic problem” to read the Gospels well.
When Smart Theologians Endorse Dumb Hermeneutics
I can’t remember when I’ve read a book that was so disrespectful to women
No serious person can read the book and not see that (Rachel Held) Evans is mocking the Bible. There’s no getting around that. When you twist God’s word, act as if a narrative description is a Biblical command, and then use it to satirize views that no one holds, then you are mocking both the Bible and Christians.
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