The Illusion of Normal Days
The world-ending return of Jesus will be as the world-ending days of Noah.
To prepare is not to build a boat in the backyard, but to eat and drink, speak and marry all while looking and waiting for Christ’s promised coming. We live mindful of eternal souls. We live expecting rain. We live in reverent fear of God. What does the world see you building? Is there anything... Continue Reading
Our Suffering Profits Us and Benefits Others
God is the potter, and we are the clay. He will use the pain of suffering to mold us.
There is no power in our strength, but there is much power in our weakness—God’s power—made infinitely more visible and glorious against the backdrop of our frail humanity. I am convinced that the more trials we endure, the more opportunities God will give us to comfort those who will have to walk where we have... Continue Reading
Praying for the Nations in Reformation Europe
Vermigli’s most popular works is his Sacred Prayers from the Psalms of David, which provide a unique window into his theological heart.
Vermigli was an influential theologian, preacher, and abbot in Roman Catholic Italy. He came to embrace Protestant theology in the 1530s and began a reformation in the northern Italian city of Lucca. In 1542, finding himself too well known, Vermigli evaded arrest and inquisitorial trial by fleeing to the relative safety of the Protestant north.... Continue Reading
Jesus’ Ministry to a Lipreader
Jesus’ ability and intentionality to adapt the communication of grace to this one particular man is astounding.
We should learn to minister to others around us with Jesus’ kind of intentional and purposeful compassion. We need to “speak the language” of our hearers so they will know the love of Christ and most effectively hear his word. Even preachers can learn from the account a little something more of how to minister... Continue Reading
Catherine Willoughby – An Outspoken Reformer
Catherine Willoughby married Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, in 1533, she became one of the wealthiest and most powerful women in England.
Catherine was frustrated with the new queen’s compromises in the matter of religion. She supported preachers such as John Hooper, John A Lasko, John Field, opening to them the parish of the Holy Trinity Minories in London, which was under her jurisdiction. In her home, she employed as preacher and tutor for her children Miles... Continue Reading
Book Review: When Prayer Is a Struggle
Through this book, God will do that very thing—help you fight through your struggles and learn to enjoy prayer as one of his most precious gifts.
Kevin Halloron’s When Prayer Is a Struggle is meant to console Christians who are struggling to pray, to diagnose their troubles, and to provide practical counsel that can motivate them once more. A book that is appropriately simple and relatively short, it serves as a very relevant and very applicable guide to prayer. I expect every... Continue Reading
Steady on, Christian
What is your only comfort in life and death?
Your comfort is found in your belonging to Christ. Hairs may fall from your head, but they will not do so apart from the will of your heavenly Father. It is He who loves you, not the CDC or anyone else. So be steady, find your comfort in Him, and then live for His glory.... Continue Reading
Warnings for Counselors from the Book of Job
Job's friends made four key errors—mistakes we should strive to avoid.
Job’s counselors mistakenly thought they could discern the purposes of God in Job’s experience. Their errant conclusions led to erroneous counsel. If nothing else, the book of Job reminds us that the ways of God in any given situation are largely inscrutable. As the Lord shows Job when He appears in the whirlwind, our minds... Continue Reading
Review of “Rejoice and Tremble” By Michael Reeves
Book Review: Reeves begins with a great question: Is fear good or bad?
Reeves argues that there are multiple types of fear. First, natural fear is the fear of pain, accidents, and death. These are the result of the fall, but they are not sinful in themselves. A second form of fear he calls “Sinful Fear,” which gets its name because it derives from our sin. We fear... Continue Reading
Learning from the Hours
Have you ever noticed that in Genesis chapter one, the days are the wrong way around?
The days in the Old Testament seem to be backwards. Of course, I’m sure we can all grasp that they count time differently, so it’s not wrong but different. Except, I would like to contend that the Old Testament’s way of counting days is instructive to us. Honestly, it’s also better. The day starts in the evening... Continue Reading
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