On Earth, as It Is in Heaven: Making Plans That Please the Lord
If we are going to make progress in the world, we must make plans and keep them.
What does God have for me on earth, while I await heaven? Or better, how I do God’s will on earth as it is in heaven. If that is the prayer Jesus teaches us to pray (Matt. 6:9), how then should we live? As new creations in Christ, how do we order our steps? Do... Continue Reading
I’ve Heard It Said, “Once Saved, Always Saved”
The Bible repeatedly warns us that God will not finally save you if you don’t persevere in the faith and good works.
Warning passages are a God-ordained means to a God-ordained end. They’re one of the ways God ensures that all genuine believers will persevere. And that’s why I think the bumper sticker line “once saved, always saved” is misleading. A more accurate way to say it is “once saved, always a believer” or “once saved, always... Continue Reading
52 Years On: The End of Abortion Advances
Over the past 52 years parents have given more than 75,000,000 children as sacrifices to their idols.
Carey offered to care for the widows and bring up the children alive. But he did not only make offers to the people. William Carey went from village to village and from house to house, preaching the gospel of God concerning Jesus Christ His Son. Carey knew that the hope for India was not in... Continue Reading
Doctrinal Basics: The Triune God of Scripture
Like David in Psalm 8, we should look in awe towards our Creator.
It is important to build your understanding of the Trinity from the Scriptures, which are perfect, and not an external source, which is imperfect. Extra-biblical sources can be very helpful in explaining and understanding what the Bible teaches, but the foundation must be Scripture. The belief in Triune God is a core foundational doctrine... Continue Reading
Are Moral Truths a Product of Culture?
Moral relativists believe cultures and people groups create their moral codes rather than discover them.
Cultures may recognize and employ moral principles, but this doesn’t mean they created these principles. In fact, many scientists and philosophers are suspicious about any causal relationship between evolution and moral virtue. The evolutionary process often results in disharmony and strife; morality seems to require us to overcome the “evolved beast” in each of us.... Continue Reading
Book Review: Christian Journaling or Psychic Channeling?
Brenna Scott’s well-documented book demonstrates that the Jesus Calling series of devotional books align more closely with occult psychic channeling than with anything truly Christian.
Christian Journaling or Psychic Channeling? dramatically unmasks many Christian-sounding ideas set forth in Jesus Calling by comparing them to what Scripture really says and means in context. [This] work is an excellent, biblical resource for Christians who might otherwise be deceived by the lure of Jesus Calling, or those who have known something was amiss but struggled... Continue Reading
Sharing Christ’s Sufferings
There is a cup of suffering every disciple must drink.
If somehow you started your Christian life without someone explaining that you were signing up for suffering, it’s time to break it to you: there is no such thing as a Christian life without suffering. There is a line in a well-known story of Jesus (Matt 20:20-28) that often gets overlooked. James and John... Continue Reading
All the Dark We Cannot See
If we were to taste upon our conversion all the sin we now do battle against, our souls would surely have wasted away.
The more holy we become through Christ’s life in us, the more sin we will see in ourselves. There is less sin than before, but we hate it more. We begin to see evil through the eyes of Jesus Himself; that is, we begin to despise it for the filth it truly is. For... Continue Reading
William H. Green, Apologist for the Old Testament
Green often defended the Old Testament's divine inspiration and supernatural origin against the theories of higher criticism.
W.H. Green was honored with the Doctor of Divinity by both Princeton University in 1857 and the University of Edinburgh in 1884, to which was added the LL.D. by Rutgers College in 1873. In 1868, he was elected to succeed President Maclean at Princeton University, which he declined, but he did serve the university as... Continue Reading
The “Rodney Dangerfield” of Creation
Mature Creation is a recognition of the omnipotence of God, of a power so great that it disquiets us and brings us to silence before the One whose ways are not like our own.
Had Adam fulfilled the Covenant of Works, he would have been granted an end to his probation and been brought into eternal life. Just as Adam’s fulfillment of the covenant would have presumably resulted in physical changes to creation, so perhaps his failure resulted in corresponding changes. This, of course, is speculative. But it is... Continue Reading
What God Meant is What God Means
God’s original meaning still applies today.
God’s word is applicable in each generation, and surely there are ways to apply God’s word today that the original hearers would not have considered thousands of years ago. But the encouragement, the commands, the original intentions are the same. It is a glorious task to search out God’s word. “It is the glory... Continue Reading
Remaining in Neverland
Younger Americans are not learning how to stand on their own two feet.
Many baby boomers removed the burden of social expectations and duties from their children (including the duty to provide grandchildren) in the name of freedom. But it turns out that there is no freedom to move in zero gravity—you just float aimlessly. By refusing to weigh their children down with norms and hard economic realities,... Continue Reading
Churches Can Provide a Safe Environment for Turning Away from Addiction
When we are willing to be honest, it lays the foundation for genuine repentance and change.
As you get deeper into addiction, you get better and better at covering your tracks and deceiving other people. You believe your own lie that, “Things aren’t that bad.” You learn to hide your actions from family and healthy friends. You avoid God and the thought of God in every way you can. Honesty may... Continue Reading
The Church of Empathy
Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love, Power, and Justice in an American Church.
The story of these sincere Anabaptist-type progressives has confirmed me, a Presbyterian, in my commitment to an Augustinian anthropology and belief in the importance of Scripture as normative for doctrine and life. Calvin once declared that doctrine without zeal is like a sword in the hand of a lunatic. One of the many lessons of... Continue Reading
10 Must-Read Books by the Puritans for Christians Today
The Mystery of Providence by John Flavel (1628-1691).
First published in 1678, John Flavel’s The Mystery of Providence is based on the words “God that performeth all things for me” (Psalm 57:2). It shows us how providence works for us in every stage and experience of our lives. The Mystery of Providence is richly illustrated from the lives of believers and from the... Continue Reading
More Than Memories
Prayer in Nehemiah (17).
The travelogue of Nehemiah 9:8-31 chronicles God’s personal involvement in their lives as His people to deliver, sustain, rescue, and lead them. Though they were faithless, He remained faithful. Don’t believe it? Look at the pictures. Open the family album and behold the glory of your God. “And You divided the sea before them,... Continue Reading
Beware the Fractured Mirror of Digital Technology
Review: ‘A Web of Our Own Making’ by Antón Barba-Kay
Barba-Kay admits digital technology has improved and will continue to improve our lives in particular ways. However, he doesn’t leave us guessing about his basic evaluation: “I regard the digital revolution as a basically dehumanizing force”. Our digital devices are history’s first “natural” technology. The printing press and the telephone, for example, each changed... Continue Reading
God Still Speaks
Reading the Bible with astonishment.
Astonishment receives God’s word with humility. We have no claim to our Creator’s words, no right, yet he speaks to us freely, opening his heart to us, showing us his character, inviting us to fellowship with him. By such gracious speech, he shatters our pride and sheds light on our dark ways. A new... Continue Reading
Grover Cleveland’s Presidency & Inauguration Day 2025
On January 20, 2025, Donald Trump became the second U. S. President to be inaugurated to a new term separated by four years, the other one being Grover Cleveland.
On Monday, January 20, 2025, President Elect Donald Trump will be inaugurated to his second term as President of the United States after serving his first before current President Joe Biden. Thus, he is the second president to serve two nonconsecutive terms. Each time a new president is inaugurated, it reminds the American people of... Continue Reading
Christian Apologetics on ‘Rogan’
The popular podcast host appeared receptive to a lengthy presentation of the Gospel accounts.
Huff and Rogan discussed when Rogan brought up the anti-Christian prejudice among elites, listening audiences are increasingly open to consensus-bucking narratives. Apologists should discard inadequate tools regardless of their utility, but there isn’t even a shallow pragmatic excuse left for keeping them now. The future of apologetics is maximalist. Christian apologist Wesley Huff’s recent... Continue Reading
A Tale of Three Sufferers: A Parable
How the three boys responded to this season of suffering would shape the rest of their lives.
The Lord Jesus was innocent, was perfectly righteous. He suffered more than you and I can ever imagine, and remember what God’s Word tells us? ‘When He was reviled, did not revile in return; when He suffered, He did not threaten, but committed Himself to Him who judges righteously.’ Twelve-year-olds Peter, James, and John... Continue Reading
True Freedom: Breaking Free from False Liberty
The Holy Spirit’s presence and power are essential for experiencing and maintaining true freedom.
Paul is showing us that human beings are always serving something. The question isn’t whether we will serve but what we will serve. When we’re liberated from sin’s dominion, we’re not set free into autonomous independence but into life-giving dependence on God. This is why, in God’s upside-down kingdom, true liberty comes through submission to... Continue Reading
The Genesis of Long Lives
Something of the glory and wisdom of God is displayed in the way in which He has ordered His purposes in conjunction with the human lifespan.
In light of the fall, it was a great kindness from God to Adam to allow him to see so many of his descendants—even to the seventh generation. This is heightened by the fact that Adam’s first son murdered his second son. How kind was our God to show Adam something of His covenant faithfulness... Continue Reading
Put the Grill in the Front Yard
The Smiths did not give up on Rosaria Butterfield. Let’s be like the Smiths.
Butterfield titles one her chapters “God Never Gets the Address Wrong.” Your neighbors are not a coincidence. They do not live by you merely due to an accident of the housing market. God placed you next to them and he did it for a reason. I’ll admit, this is a scary proposition. We don’t get... Continue Reading
Jimmy Carter and John Lennon’s Leftist Anthem
Moralistic, Therapeutic Deism is not Christianity. It is not even a religion.
Who could possibly be opposed to a religion that calls everyone to be nice, compliant and tolerant?— a religion that helps people?—a religion that makes the world a better place?—a religion unencumbered by “superstition, dogma and an unscientific metaphysic?” This, of course, is the attractive ideology of communism: to be good, to help people, to... Continue Reading
Will You Pass the Test of Praise?
Condition my heart to receive affirmation from others in a way that you receive all praise.
When praise meets godly desires, it does not deflect the gracious words. Praiseinspires gratitude towards God. One telltale sign of our maturity is how easily we transfer honor to God, recognizing him as the source and power of our performance. Why? Because when the heart is tested by this praise, it reveals we did it... Continue Reading
What Is A Nation?
If Christians want to fulfill the Great Commission, they must be able to answer this basic question.
Does something deeper, perhaps even spiritual, animate the strong opposition we witness today to nationhood as traditionally understood? I believe so, for this simple reason already cited: Nations are the object of the Great Commission. Jesus commands us to disciple the nations by preaching the gospel to them, baptizing those who believe, planting churches, and... Continue Reading
My Body, My Slave
God is the God of constant activity.
The discipline of our bodies, according to Paul, is for no other reason than to ensure that we will not be rejected by Christ on the last day. Of course, Jesus’s standard isn’t the body-mass index or how many pushups we can do. That is ridiculous. Paul’s point is that the physical discipline he endures... Continue Reading
The Best Seats at Church
Jesus wants to change how we walk into church.
The best seats are those that are near to others. It’s easy to fill up seats at church like a tube carriage, dotting ourselves around the room, leaving big gaps. On the tube, it would be weird to go and sit right next to the only other person. But, church isn’t like a tube carriage.... Continue Reading
Begin 2025 with the Fear of the Lord
And as we celebrate the new year, let’s reflect upon the past.
History matters a great deal, not because “those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Guess what, we will repeat our mistakes of the past, no matter how much knowledge of it we possess. History matters because those who inhabited past times had a nature like ours—on the one hand, possessing great... Continue Reading