Kenneth Woodward Untangles Some Political Strands in American Religion (Review)
Woodward, who has written earlier books on saints and on miracles in different religious traditions, has produced a volume that is clearly meant as a career valedictory
“Journalism’s emphasis on what is provably factual — vote totals, stock prices, batting averages — left most reporters and editors leery of the ineffable, inchoate qualities of religion. To the degree that mainstream American journalism gradually rose to the task in later decades, it did so by erroneously trying to comprehend religion through the prism... Continue Reading
How I Found Freedom From Gender Confusion (Part 1)
I struggled, but with no conviction, and defeat was a foregone conclusion
From time to time I’d take a stand: I’d throw away my entire stash of clothing, and vow to “go straight”. But my only real weapons in the fight were a vague instinct that cross-dressing must be “wrong”, and the associated feelings of guilt. They were too easily rationalized away. Why should I feel guilty?... Continue Reading
PCA Pastor’s Wife Killed When Truck Hits Lakeland Home
Jan Folds, wife of retired PCA minister Wyatt Folds, wife killed when truck careened through front wall of her house.
The truck continued through the dining room and ended up in the kitchen where Jan’s husband, retired pastor Wyatt Folds, was about to leave. The pastor told detectives the truck barely missed hitting him. “They got up to start their early morning routine. To just live the morning lifestyle, and it ended in an instant,... Continue Reading
A Friendly Reply To Derek Regarding Calvin, Luther, & The Falling Of The Church
Calvin never countenanced marginalizing of the doctrine of justification
“It is true that Calvin was generally more irenic toward other Protestants than was Luther and he was critical of Luther’s rhetoric on the Supper (inter alia) but there is a problem with the way you relate Calvin to Luther.” You can catch up with the flow of the discussion via Derek Rishmawy’s interesting... Continue Reading
Barna Group: 43% of Evangelicals Refuse to Vote for Trump or Clinton
These results confirm what many Evangelicals probably know already by intuition – that the Evangelical movement is highly divided this election cycle.
Not surprisingly, the data show that this election is unusually divisive. The Barna Group noted that Evangelicals have overwhelmingly supported the Republican candidate in recent decades. While a majority of Evangelicals support Trump, their support for the Republican candidate has typically been at least 20 percentage points higher. This indicates that Evangelical backing for Trump... Continue Reading
4 Reasons Spurgeon Died Poor
Charles Spurgeon could have been one of the richest millionaires in London. Instead, he died poor.
Spurgeon possessed an attitude of stewardship, not ownership. Spurgeon believed the God who called him would equip him. His finances reflect an attitude of stewardship, not ownership. “Our confidence is that God will supply all our means, and he has always done so hitherto” (Lectures to My Students 1:vii). Charles Spurgeon could have been one of... Continue Reading
Donald Trump and Sexual Assault: What Else Are Evangelical Voters Willing to Accept?
Where does women’s dignity as human beings made in the image of God rank on your hierarchy of moral and political concerns? What about sexual assault?
Abortion is a horrific, deeply rooted moral problem. Terrorism and violence seem to claim more lives every day. But every two minutes in this country another woman – or a child – is sexually assaulted. These are our wives. These are our children. These are our neighbors. What else do we have to say? Who... Continue Reading
Her Son Shot Their Daughters 10 Years Ago. Then, These Amish Families Embraced Her As a Friend
Ten years later, the Amish families are still consciously deciding to forgive every day
“For King, forgiveness has not come easy. Some parents have mourned the death of their daughters. Others have seen their daughters fully heal. His daughter survived, but he also lost her. Every day, he fights back his anger. Every day, he has to forgive again.” A single word in black cursive font hangs above... Continue Reading
Baby, You Stole the Life I Wanted
A society built around the individual, rather than the family, will petrify into unspeakable emptiness.
Marie Claire magazine recently published one of the saddest things I’ve ever read. It’s one of those pieces where all the names have been changed because nobody wants to admit to what they’ve just admitted: child-regret. Mothers, feeling doomed by motherhood and wishing they’d never had kids. The article opens with Laura’s story: “The regret... Continue Reading
Bonhoeffer – A Reliable Guide?
This editorial is a warning. Don’t take Bonhoeffer as your teacher!
For evangelicals the cross is at the centre of their faith. Bonhoeffer did not believe in substitutionary atonement – Christ suffering as a substitute for our sins, dying in our place to earn eternal life for us. The cross of Christ certainly is important to him, but in a very different way – it is... Continue Reading
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