Politics, the Church, and Getting Our Story Straight
The story is of Christ so ruling over the nations of the world that the church might be built up.
We pray “that [Christ] would be pleased so to exercise the kingdom of his power in all the world, as may best conduce to these ends.” Notice the ecclesial logic. The “these ends” have to do with the proclamation of the gospel, the saving of the lost, and the edification of the saints. In other... Continue Reading
The Basics: The Order of Salvation
Our salvation is truly of the Lord, from beginning to end.
According to Paul, all those whom God foreknows, he also predestines. Predestination refers to the particular end for which his elect are chosen–to be conformed to the image of Christ (as spelled out in the final link in the golden chain, glorification–verse 30). Those foreknown are predestined, and those predestined are called. Calling occurs when... Continue Reading
Threefold Redemption
God is the master-teacher, and the gospel of Jesus is the greatest subject—redemption alluded to, redemption accomplished, and redemption applied.
In those hours on the cross, Jesus would perform the greatest act in human history, accomplishing salvation through the atonement that only He as the God-man could offer (1 Peter 2:24). Part of God’s redemptive plan was for Jesus to be humiliated, a humiliation that involved the nakedness that David predicted in Psalm 22:18. The... Continue Reading
Loneliness, Despair, and the Christian Countermeasure
Government cannot cure an epidemic of alienation, but the church can.
The church is the place where people should treat each other as people, not as things, where they freely give of themselves to others because they know that Christ has freely given himself in grace to them. As the church is increasingly marginalized in America, she will become a stronger community. But the danger of... Continue Reading
On Fearing the One for Whom You Live
Our fear of God grounds and balances our affection for God, and that is a wonderful thing.
It is all too easy to convince ourselves that we are fearers and worshipers of God because we attend church and sing songs. Yet Scripture clarifies for us that external shows of worship do not always reflect the heart: “…this people honors me with their lips, while their hearts are far from me, and their... Continue Reading
Glorifying God and Glorifying Mountains
In a hundred ways we can rob God of the glory that is rightly his.
God is beautiful. Rightly seen, God evokes awe and wonder. God is worthy of glory—as much more glory as the maker of a mountain has more glory than the mountain itself (Hebrews 3:3). It is fitting that we gaze at him and admire him and it is fitting that we tell others about him. This... Continue Reading
“Everyone Will Be Salted with Fire”: Making Sense of Mark 9:49
Be aware that we must be refined continually.
When Jesus speaks of salt losing its salty quality, He’s referring to the method of mining salt unique to that period and region. People would harvest salt from either the Dead Sea or from the salt pans, and in those salt pans the water evaporated. In that process, the pure salt would leech out, leaving... Continue Reading
The Young People Who Believe They Can Change Their Race
How far are experts going to go to accommodate playing with race identity, and how far should Christians go in return?
The more fundamental problem–the one at the root of this and every one of the many identity crises infecting our cultural moment–is that so many young people have absorbed a way of thinking about themselves and reality best identified as “expressive individualism.” For years, they’ve heard that the world is whatever they decide and make... Continue Reading
The Creator’s Authorized Realistic Account of Creation: Interpretation of Genesis 1–3 Is Neither Literal nor Figurative
Do we believe the Creator’s authorized, factual portrayal of how God created all things?
Evangelicals who receive Genesis 1–11 as factually portraying God’s creative work should be commended. Yet, defending “literal interpretation” to counter “figurative interpretation” prolongs the misguided debate and tends to induce many Christians to suppress Scripture’s realistic portrayals of God’s creative actions and historical accounts throughout Genesis 1–11. Even so, far more egregious is the subjugation... Continue Reading
Gods, Fathers, and Pastors
On magistrates and ministers in Peter Martyr Vermigli’s 'Common Places'.
Even as magistrates are subject to the correction of ministers, ministers are subject to the governance of magistrates as to temporals (i.e., just laws and sanctions) as citizens. Contra the Papist position, ministers are not above or outside the law. But so too are ministers subject to magistrates as to their “function” per the religious... Continue Reading
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