Richard Baxter’s Balanced Approach to Depression and Anxiety
What happens if someone’s symptoms and behaviors and wrongly attributed to willful and sinful decisions?
“Are psychiatric illnesses the result of sin or not? Are individuals to blame, or are they not responsible for their fate?” Lundy insists, “For the most part, we are left with the much more general sense that sickness and suffering in the world are distributed in ways that defy our comprehension.” Lundy points to Richard... Continue Reading
Christian Fire Chief Receives $1.2 Million for Violations of His Religious Liberty
Fire Chief Cochran’s victory reveals—once again—that freedom of religion and freedom of speech are often intertwined.
In December 2017, a federal district court recognized that the city of Atlanta’s actions were unconstitutional. The court struck down Atlanta’s policy that requires government employees to receive permission before engaging in free speech outside of their jobs, the very policy the city used to justify firing Cochran. The Story: A fire chief that was fired for... Continue Reading
You Are Worthy of My All: God’s Faithfulness in a Turkish Prison Cell
Lyle Dorsett and his wife Mary discuss their relationship with Andrew and Norine Brunson, and Andrew’s years in a Turkish prison.
During his time in prison, Andrew survived by reading Scripture, singing praises to the Lord and reading the books, many of which were Christian biographies. Some of us were able to get books to Norine and she would then act like a librarian for Andrew and would swap four books at a time in and... Continue Reading
A Mother’s Testimony
The following testimony was written by the wife of the Rev. Samuel Blair to her children on October 8, 1763.
Oh! the goodness of God in preventing me then, and at other times, when I had formed schemes to ruining myself. This, my dear children, I would have you carefully to ponder and beg for direction in before proceeding in such an affair in which your happiness for this world, if not the next, depends.... Continue Reading
The Death of Ulrich Zwingli
Over and over his daughter’s last word to him rattled in his brain
“Ulrich pressed his family to his heart for as long as he dared. As he pulled away, he forced his best smile before donning his helmet to shroud his tears and his contorted face. As horse and rider turned the corner of the street Ulrich turned back for one last look and a wave.” ... Continue Reading
Ninja’s Take On The “Billy Graham Rule”
Blevins’ video game skills are his major claim to fame, but he made news this past August for a very different reason. In an August interview he let it be known that as a rule he didn’t play with female gamers.
The “Ninja rule” and “Mike Pence rule” do have their downsides for the women around them, but there is also an upside. No one can accuse any of them of the wrong-doings bringing down so many in so many other fields. Their marriages are protected not only from sin, but even from the appearance of... Continue Reading
A Beautiful Scandal
How could such a vile person regain the dignity he lost in a dirty trade with the devil?
Newton’s story is a beautiful scandal. Like Paul, he increasingly woke to the nightmare of his sin personified by the beautiful black faces of his victims. But God’s grace had introduced a new reality: undeserved pardon. The man who should have died a thousand deaths for his sin died at peace in the hope of... Continue Reading
Elder J. C. Grayson, The Biblical Recorder, and the Sabbath
Pastor Joseph Carson Grayson ministered faithfully for more than fifty years with the North Carolina Baptists from 1831-1884.
The long-serving pastor encouraged fellow Catawba River Baptists to devote the day to prayer and meditation, reading the Scriptures in the family circle, and keeping “our children in subjection and order, as much as in us lies,” as an integral part of devoting oneself to God on the Lord’s Day. The admonition was regardless of... Continue Reading
Cheese Sandwiches, Picture Framing and Work
It was a job. Plain and simple. Plain and simple and boring and repetitive.
Much has been written about work and vocation from a theological perspective the past few decades, and there have been plenty of conferences about work, but as this article in Christianity Today points out, it’s not janitors and fast food workers – or even machinists – who frequent Christian conferences about work. And they’re not reading books... Continue Reading
The Man Who Died for the Lord’s Supper
On July 4, 1533, Frith burned at the stake as a heretic.
He died because of Reformation debates surrounding the Lord’s Supper—a Christian practice that believers today too often relegate to secondary importance, at best. Frith rejected the belief that Christ’s body and blood exist literally within the elements of the Lord’s Supper—that is, within the bread and wine. And for this reason, he burned. “Amongst... Continue Reading
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