Raw Tears and Holy Fury: Confronting theReality of Human Trafficking
“You may choose to look the other way but you can never say again that you did not know.” William Wilberforce
Essentially human trafficking is the exploitation of the vulnerable by the powerful for financial gain, and while sexual exploitation is often what springs to mind when we think of human trafficking, it is by no means the full picture. Other forms of trafficking include forced labor, criminal exploitation, domestic servitude and even organ harvesting. Victims include women, children and men from every nation in the world. Human trafficking is truly shocking in both its nature and its scale and, while ignorance is blissful, once our eyes have been opened inaction is NOT an option for the follower of Jesus.
What America’s Founders Really Thought About the Bible
Many of the American founders regarded the Bible as indispensable to a regime of republican self-government and liberty under law.
A self-governing people, in short, had to be a virtuous people who were controlled from within by an internal moral compass, which would replace external control by an authoritarian ruler’s whip and rod. The whip and rod were clearly unacceptable for a free, self-governing people. A moral people respected social order, legitimate authority, oaths and... Continue Reading
Ben Franklin’s Calvinist Sister
In many ways, Jane’s life, not Ben’s, was representative of the age
“I and others have emphasized the contrast between Ben Franklin’s self-professed Deism and his longtime friendship with the Calvinist evangelist George Whitefield, but Lepore convinced me that his sister’s influence likely had an even stronger tethering effect connecting Ben to the faith of his childhood.” In my Baylor graduate seminar on the American Revolution,... Continue Reading
Who Divided The Bible Into Chapters And Verses?
Stephen Langton was the one who came up with the chapter divisions we take for granted
“Before Langton (1150-1228), several people had tried to divide the longer books of the Bible into more manageable chunks. But his version was the one that stuck and is the basis of the chapters we use today.” Anyone who knows about Magna Carta and King John has probably heard of Stephen Langton, the Archbishop... Continue Reading
Scott R. Swain Appointed President of Reformed Seminary in Orlando
The Board of Trustees of Reformed Theological Seminary has appointed Dr. Scott R. Swain as the fifth president of its Orlando campus.
He joined the faculty in 2006 after several years of teaching at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, and he served for several years as Assistant and later Associate Professor of Systematic Theology. In fall 2012 he took on administrative duties as Academic Dean, and his service in that role involved the addition of three new faculty... Continue Reading
Congress is Nearly 98% Religious, Even More Than the U.S. At Large
Only 11 out of 535 current congressmen and congresswomen identify as religiously “unaffiliated” or refused to specify
Astonishingly the religiosity of Congress is considerably higher than America at large. Seventy-one percent of Americans describe themselves as Christian, according to Pew statistics. While significant, the proportion of Americans who identify as Christian remains nearly 20 percentage points lower than members of Congress. In particular, Catholicism and the four major Mainline traditions were overrepresented relative to the American population.
Turkish Court Rejects Appeal of American Pastor Jailed On ‘Terror’ Charges for Christian Faith
Andrew Brunson’s appeal of false imprisonment for terrorism denied by Turkish court.
Brunson and his wife, Norine, who have lived in Turkey for over 20 years, were reportedly summoned back in October to discuss their application to renew their visas, but were instead arrested by Turkish police. While Norine was released 13 days later, Brunson was charged with having links to terror organizations. A Turkish court... Continue Reading
Why You Probably Don’t Need a Quiet Time
Have your devotional habits languished? Here are some helpful comments to guide you back to a vibrant, meaningful and healthy time with God.
Rightly motivated devotional habits are never legalistic. Neither the strictest obedience to the Word of God nor the most zealous pursuit of holiness is ever legalistic if one’s motives are right. The measurement of legalism is not the consistency of one’s devotional practices but the heart’s reason for doing them. Finally, you’ll likely never be less... Continue Reading
The Remarkable Legacy Of Charles Hodge
This week marks the 219th birthday of Charles Hodge, arguably the most influential American theologian of the 19th century.
Hodge and the Princetonians never seemed prepared to accommodate the egalitarian, populist tendencies within evangelicalism, a fact that limited Hodge’s appeal to rank-and-file believers. Indeed, Hodge seems representative of those in the Reformed segment of evangelicalism who struggle to sympathize with their more “democratic” Christian brethren. This tension persists today, as Reformed folks routinely lament... Continue Reading
Reading About Machen in The Reformed Journal
The Reformed Journal’s regular contributors were slightly sympathetic but underwhelmed by J. Gresham Machen.
The Presbyterian hierarchy simply responded — with a hammer, mind you — to Machen’s provocations. That could have been the case but no one argued that. They largely reduced Machen to a cantankerous figure who got what most of us would expect if we rock the boat the way he did. Reformed Protestants 50... Continue Reading
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