Train Yourself for Godliness
Reflecting on Paul’s Words in 1 Timothy 4:7–8
The pursuit of godliness requires focus, sacrifice, commitment, and endurance. Paul knows that training is a perfect metaphor for Christian obedience—training “for godliness” (1 Tim. 4:7b). This kind of training has value for the present life and the life to come. In other words, there is an all-compassing value to this pursuit. Don’t you want to... Continue Reading
God Made Us Male and Female- Why We Cannot Change Our Gender
Submitting to God’s created pattern for humanity is a part of our response of faith to the gospel of Jesus Christ.
God doesn’t need to conform to our feelings, or our biological ability to mutilate our bodies. God has made and declared what is good. It is good for men to be manly, and good for women to be womanly. Each culture WILL look slightly different, but that doesn’t change the created order of God, and... Continue Reading
About That One Barth Quote
Disregard for a Manmade Method of Theological Inquiry Is Not Indicative of a Bad Character
Guess who is marked out as a false prophet by such criteria. Karl Barth. For that man maintained a lifelong, impenitent, and fairly public affair with his research assistant, Charlotte von Kirschbaum, in which he both refused to repent when confronted by his mother and forced his wife (who knew about the affair) to accept... Continue Reading
It’s Just a Distraction
The devil loves to get us talking about good things, so long as we are not sharing the best thing.
Be aware of the schemes of the devil and avoid being distracted from the main thing. When we go to share Christ, let’s actually share Christ! We need to tell folks about sin, and righteousness, and the coming judgement. People need to hear about their great need, and they need to hear that God in... Continue Reading
Why Mixing Up Social Justice and Biblical Justice Matters
One of the crucial errors at the heart of this new social justice framework is a redefinition of sin.
Many Christians in the West recognise that they have received blessings that others have not. We have education, wealth, and opportunities that many around our world do not. Social justice advocates want us to feel guilty about this and to see it as a privilege for which we should automatically feel ashamed. If we allow... Continue Reading
Deep Mirth and Mourning
How many tragedies go unmourned and unhonored by the church because of our loss of the capacity for sorrow?
“How can it be right to laugh when there is so much to grieve?” This is more of a question of context. We clearly must weep, just as we clearly must laugh. There are times for both, as Ecclesiastes says, but what are the proper times? Weeping should not be self-focused, but for others; laughter... Continue Reading
Lies that Paralyze: Weaponizing Pleasant Words
Lies that Live- Part 10
Many more pleasant, but false words seep into our culture. One way to be inoculated against them is to focus on what’s true, good, and beautiful. Or, as the author of Hebrews put it: But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from... Continue Reading
Hypocrisy and God’s Reputation
The Word teaches us that it honors Him when we confess our sin and sinfulness.
Our pride convinces us that God needs us to hide our sins, so as to not to bring shame upon Him. But He calls us to bring it out into the light, denounce it, be ashamed of it so that by His mercy our shame might be turned into the uplifted face of those who... Continue Reading
The Battle for Grace Alone
Augustine argued that the very cooperation with grace was the effect of God’s empowering the sinner to that cooperation.
The operative word in Augustine’s view is that regenerating grace is monergistic. It is the work of God alone. Pelagius rejected the doctrine of monergistic grace and replaces it with a view of synergism, which involves a work of cooperation between God and man. The early part of the fifth century witnessed a serious controversy... Continue Reading
Salvation Out, Self-Help In
We no longer believe in sin, so we no longer believe in a saviour.
Discussing the “saccharin-like” preaching of Joel Osteen, Wells says this of the kind of God he presents: “The dominant view, even among evangelical teenagers, is that God made everything and established a moral order, but he does not intervene. Actually, for most he is not even Trinitarian, and the incarnation and resurrection of Christ play... Continue Reading
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