He Smoked Cigars and Drank Alcoholic Beverages
Spurgeon both smoked cigars and drank alcoholic beverages.
In these two practices we see that Spurgeon was very human – a man of his times. Moreover, he was not alone in the indulgence. For instance, though John Wesley totally opposed the drinking of tea, hence the term’ tee-totaler,’ he was something of an authority on the taste of ale. Charles Wesley also indulged,... Continue Reading
Students, Colleagues Mourn Murdered UCLA Christian Professor
William Klug, the UCLA professor killed on campus on June 2, was a professing Christian beloved by students.
Klug in 2004 told the Westmont College alumni magazine, “Knowing there is a God responsible for the world makes a big difference in my motivation to understand it better. … I developed a habit of relying on God for what I felt was beyond my ability to control or what I couldn’t do for myself.”... Continue Reading
Ministering to Soldiers: An Interview with Douglas Lee
How is serving as a chaplain different than serving in a church?
“The First Amendment is crucial. It provides a covering of religious protection over the chaplain. For decades, U.S. courts have affirmed the religious and free-speech rights of chaplains and all military personnel. The free-exercise rights of military personnel can be provided for only through an authorized chaplaincy.” Tabletalk: How did you become a Christian, and... Continue Reading
31 May 1567: Guy de Bres Martyred For The Gospel
Take a moment to give thanks for the life, ministry, and faithful witness to the gospel of Guy de Bres, martyred for Christ on this day in 1567
“From prison, before his death, he wrote touching letters to his wife. On 22 May 1567 he even held a disputation with a Roman bishop in defense of the gospel and the Reformed confession. So committed was de Bres to Romans 13 as the Word of God that his last message to the people, delivered... Continue Reading
The Boy, the Gorilla, and the Outrage: Questions for Reflection
Over the past few days the story has become a national phenomenon
“Many of the people who signed the petition likely did so without fully reading it or realizing what they were asking. But most are aware they are accusing the parent of a serious crime and grievous moral offense based on nothing more than assumptions and secondhand media reports.” A day after celebrating his 17th... Continue Reading
Legalism Defined
We need to know how to identify legalism as the perennial evil it is in both its doctrinal and practical forms.
The grace of God in the gospel is the only cure for doctrinal and practical legalism. When we recognize doctrinal or practical legalism in our lives, we must flee to Christ crucified. As we do, we will again begin to grow in our love for the One who died to heal us of our propensity... Continue Reading
Court Blocks California Hospital’s Attempt To End Toddler’s Life Support
A federal appeals court on May 20 ruled the family of a toddler clinging to life in a California hospital could have more time to find a new facility for him.
Jonee Fonseca and Nate Stinson have been fighting to get care for Israel since his hospitalization, but doctors gave up, issuing a death certificate and announcing plans to remove his life support. Despite the parents’ protest, the doctors’ actions were completely legal. “The law in California allows physicians, upon making determination of brain death, to... Continue Reading
Why You Will Marry the Wrong Person
Though we believe ourselves to be seeking happiness in marriage, it isn’t that simple. What we really seek is familiarity — which may well complicate any plans we might have had for happiness.
The person who is best suited to us is not the person who shares our every taste (he or she doesn’t exist), but the person who can negotiate differences in taste intelligently — the person who is good at disagreement. Rather than some notional idea of perfect complementarity, it is the capacity to tolerate differences... Continue Reading
Nicole Cliffe: How God Messed Up My Happy Atheist Life
About an hour before our call, I knew: I believed in God.
“Like many atheists (who are generally lovely moral people like my father, who would refuse to enter heaven and instead wait outside with his Miles Davis LPs), I started out snarky and defensive about religion, but eventually came to think it was probably nice for people of faith to have faith.” I became a... Continue Reading
Luther, Palmerworms and Theological Precision
In hindsight, Luther's concerns about Erasmus seem fairly well founded
Compared to some of the shots Luther fired in his lifetime, his remarks on Erasmus in 1534 seem rather mild. But they were strident enough to elicit regret from Philip Melanchthon over Luther’s “petulance,” a “petulance” Melanchthon was quick to chalk up to “old age” rather than innate temperament. The details of Luther’s mid-1520s... Continue Reading
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