Augustine of Canterbury – A Reluctant Missionary
Augustine and his team of about forty monks landed in the Isle of Thanet (a peninsula in the east of Kent, southern England) in the spring of 597.
If Augustine was not the first to bring Christianity to England, he was the first to be sent on an official mission by a Roman pope and the first to be appointed as archbishop of Canterbury. He was also the first to adopt Gregory’s method of “recycling” pagan places and rites for Christian purposes. This... Continue Reading
B.B. Warfield: Defender of the Faith
Warfield's theological contributions have enriched the whole church.
Warfield combined a keen grasp of biblical knowledge along with all of the nuances of systematic theology…second only to Jonathan Edwards as America’s greatest theologian. Twenty-five years ago I gave an address at a college in western Pennsylvania. After the service was completed, an elderly gentleman and his wife approached me and introduced themselves... Continue Reading
Ambrose of Milan—The Reluctant Bishop Who Called Emperors to Task
This seemingly unassertive man resisted the orders of an empress and caused an emperor to walk in penitence through the city’s streets.
Ambrose is often depicted as the flogger of heretics or the subjugator of rulers. In reality, he was meek and gentle, as his writings show. His treatise on repentance, for example, begins with this advice: “If the highest end of virtue is that which aims at the advancement of most, gentleness is the most lovely... Continue Reading
The Gospel Preacher on the Titanic
Selfless Solicitude
Harper took hold of the debris I clung to. His face was pale, his lips blue from imminent hyperthermia, above the sound of the turmoil around me though his voice was weakening I heard him ask, “Are you saved?” I replied, “No.” Harper shouted the words, “Believe in the Lord Jesus and you shall be saved.” Even in... Continue Reading
Lemuel Haynes: The Most Important American Figure That You’ve Never Heard Of
He was a great minister of grace, worthy of great emulation.
In many ways, Haynes could be considered a kind of American Spurgeon—a faithful preacher and pastor, beloved for decades by his church and his family, and concerned to see the implications of the gospel fleshed out in homes and in society. An Unquestionable Legacy Lemuel Haynes is perhaps the single most important American figure... Continue Reading
Francis Turretin and His Love for Biblical Truth
"The most precise theologian in the Calvinistic tradition.”
Much of Turretin’s work was aimed at protecting the church from what he considered the greatest doctrinal threats—Roman Catholicism, Arminianism, and Amyrauldianism—and encouraging Christians to stay faithful to Scriptures. Francis, the third of the seven children of Benedetto and Louise Turretin[1], was born on October 17, 1623 and named after his paternal grandfather. Recognizing... Continue Reading
PCA Minister, Richard P. Kaufmann, Called Home to Glory
On February 18, 2023, Reverend Dr. Richard P. Kaufmann aka Poppie went home to be with his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Called then into his Heavenly Father’s business, he began preparing to lead and disciple in ministry. Dick and Liz attended Westminster Seminary in Philadelphia and finished their degrees at Westminster Seminary in Escondido, California where they moved along with their three children to establish and pastor New Life Presbyterian church. On February 18, 2023,... Continue Reading
William Borden, “The Millionaire Missionary”
Borden’s tremendous wealth did not deflect him in the least from his whole-hearted consecration to Jesus.
Borden did more than financially support the National Bible Institute and serve on its Board of Directors. He played an active role in the NBI’s summer street preaching meetings that reached thousands. During his senior year at Princeton he taught a weeknight course on the Epistle to the Galatians in the NBI’s School for Christian... Continue Reading
Christian Teacher Fired for Refusing to Hide “Gender Transitions” from Parents
Students who opposed her views on gender ideology launched a coordinated campaign and began monitoring her online statements.
Not only do public school administrators demand that educators keep key, life-changing information about children from their parents—they’ll fire teachers who refuse to lie. (LifeSiteNews—Over the past several months, we’ve published several stories in this space on the common public-school practice of hiding information about children going through gender transition from parents. This practice... Continue Reading
Machen vs. Women – A War He Never Fought
Ordained female deacons in the Northern church resulted largely from the receiving into the PCUSA in 1905-1906 of the greater part of the old born-in-revival Cumberland Presbyterian Church, which already had female deacons.
Whether the ordination of women to the offices of deacon, then ruling elder was inevitable and just a symptom of the slide or whether it actually made the slope all the more slippery…well, that’s a subject of debate. Women pastors in the PCUSA did not gain approval until 1956, two decades after Machen’s untimely death.... Continue Reading
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