Questions of Confidence
Confidentiality requires the consent of all parties.
How is a confidential relationship created? Does one person have the authority to establish confidentiality by fiat? What about the request of the leader/moderator of a group—does that, by itself, establish confidentiality? Does remaining in a group whose originator desires confidentiality equate to tacit approval of that imposed confidentiality? It ain’t what you don’t... Continue Reading
How to Handle Divisive Persons in the Church
Throughout the New Testament, we find no hesitation by the apostles to warn of those who were undermining the gospel ministry.
The best thing believers can do with divisive persons is avoid them and refuse to give them an ear, recognizing, as Paul said in light of Alexander the Coppersmith, that God will repay them according to their evil deeds. As society is presently ripped apart with divisions on every issue, the church is likewise... Continue Reading
The Moral Clarity of a Dissident
Discernment is paramount if we are to understand and properly respond to events.
Life is confounding. Faithfulness requires us to seek truth and to pray constantly for shrewdness in approaching the world around us. To do so, we must gain the moral clarity of a dissident. And when we do, we will be able to reason toward a consensus with our fellow Christians on how we should then live. ... Continue Reading
What Does “Scripture Alone” Mean, and Why Should You Care?
The Bible gives us everything we need to know about everything that truly matters.
What led the Roman Catholics astray was their understanding that the church birthed the Word of God, rather than the Word being the foundation of the church (Eph. 2:20). Yes, God gives us consciences, good sense, and even the traditions of the church from which we can glean insight into life, but knowledge of salvation... Continue Reading
“Intentional Childlessness” on the Rise
Many young adults who are choosing not to have children express a hostility toward the very idea of family.
Anti-natalism is a philosophy of hopelessness and misanthropy. It is also increasingly revealing itself to be rooted in resentment, fear, and a belief that children are a burden. The way that our culture sees children specifically, and humans in general, is wildly out of step with how God sees them. “I never expected to... Continue Reading
The Tyranny of Pragmatism
Ominous state expansion under cover of the COVID crisis is the consequence of a culture in which outcome trumps process.
Pragmatism is the true rot at the heart of our institutions, political, educational, cultural, the gamut. That it leads to tyranny is predictable. Tyranny, after all, is much more pragmatic. It is far more efficient. It can achieve ends much faster, and much simpler, than the rocky, sclerotic, openness for which the West is rightly... Continue Reading
Ruminations on Revelation: Solomon’s Reflections on Wisdom in Ecclesiastes
Solomon’s solemn and thorough investigation of life here in the light of eternity pushes forward the design of God’s redemptive revelation.
Though at times, Solomon’s language seemed to despair of any meaning to anything, he now sets forth this great truth, that, viewed from the standpoint of eternity and the perfection of God’s moral nature and the legitimacy of his law to his creature, nothing in the view of eternity is empty but all wi,l come... Continue Reading
The Letter Kills, but the Spirit Gives Life
The thing that is written kills, but the Holy Spirit in the heart gives life.
The law’s sentence of condemnation was borne for us by Christ who suffered in our stead; The handwriting of ordinances which was against us—the dreadful ‘letter’ of which Paul speaks in our text—was nailed to the cross. The law of God is holy and just and good; it is inexorable, and we have fallen... Continue Reading
Was the Protestant Reformation a Radical Revolution?
Magisterial reformers partnered with civil authorities to preserve the corpus christianum and social order in Protestant polities against radicals on one side and Catholic powers on the other.
The Protestant ethos of “Ad Fontes” (“to the sources”) demonstrates their appreciation of the ancient faith. Protestants likewise cherished the social and intellectual roots of ordered liberty, and they opposed all efforts by radicals or revolutionaries to tear them up. If critics of Protestantism are to believed, Reformation Day is a day to lament:... Continue Reading
Total Depravity and Clinical Anxiety
Our brains have malfunctioned because of sin.
Sin has affected all of us. Not one person has escaped it—even the Son of God, who took on the sin of those who would believe in Him. Jesus didn’t have sin, of course, but was made to be sin on our behalf (2 Cor. 5:21). Our minds, our bodies, our souls have been wholly... Continue Reading
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