Union with Christ: A Neglected Truth
Very often our union with Christ exerts a profound but unexamined influence.
A brief survey of the New Testament will quickly reveal the importance of the idea of union with Christ. This idea is given special emphasis in the writings of Paul, as one finds the Apostle describing virtually every aspect of Christian privilege and experience as “in Christ” or “in Him.” I was born and... Continue Reading
10 Things You Should Know about the “Jezebel Spirit”
Although the first Jezebel had been dead for over 1,000 years, her spirit had, as it were, found new life in this woman of Thyatira.
“But I have this against you, that you tolerate that woman Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess and is teaching and seducing my servants to practice sexual immorality and to eat food sacrificed to idols. I gave her time to repent, but she refuses to repent of her sexual immorality.” Is there any such... Continue Reading
Is Saving the Earth More Important than Saving Souls? (The 10 Commandments of Progressive Christianity #10).
We finally come to the tenth and last “commandment” of progressive Christianity and this one is a classic: “Life in This World is More Important than the Afterlife.”
It’s hard to imagine a statement that better captures the ethos of progressive Christianity than this one. It marks a profound pivot away from matters eternal and toward matters earthly. Let’s not worry ourselves about what happens after death, we are told, because no one knows anyway. All that matters is helping the poor, feeding... Continue Reading
Holding on to Hope
Even though many of their contemporaries and others who had gone before them lost their appetite for God’s Word, Simeon and Anna clung to it in faith.
There had been four centuries of divine silence in Israel. The God who had progressively revealed his plan and purpose in redemption through the pages of Holy Scripture, had added nothing to his revealed word throughout this time. Even though it was a period marked with major national and international crises that affected God’s people... Continue Reading
Come Away and Rest
The Sabbath rest was a creation command and gift and the Ten Commandments are the moral law for all humanity.
Every seven days Adam and Eve would stop their pleasant work of tending the garden and studying the animal and plant life, to spend the day in meditation on the works and the word of Almighty God. Perhaps, especially on this day, they would commune with their Creator as he walked with them in the... Continue Reading
5 Ways the Gospel Can Rescue Your Marriage
The good news for marriage is the good news for all of life: the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Human marriage can be a beautiful gift. But Paul talks about marriage in the context of Christ’s gift to the church to teach us that the best human marriages are but shadows of the glorious marriage between Christ and believers (Eph. 5:32–33). In the gospel, Christ gives himself as the new life we need. He... Continue Reading
Can We Trust the New Testament?
As Christians we believe that the original words of the New Testament writers were inspired by God.
In the ancient world, there were (obviously) no laptop computers, spell checks, printing presses, or other modern conveniences to help produce books. If one wanted to write a book, one did it by hand. And if one wanted to see that book “published” and distributed throughout a broad geographical region, copies of that book would... Continue Reading
Hell: Who Goes There?
The sinner is sent to hell because of the guilt of their sin.
The sin of an individual leaves them as guilty and condemned before God. The fair and just punishment of any offense against the holiness of the eternal God is sentencing the sinner to hell. The Bible says, “[for] all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:23). Who Goes to... Continue Reading
Befriending Our Trials
We naturally think of our trials as our enemies, cruel opposers of our good and thieves of our daily happiness.
James is not preaching an empty grin-and-bear-it, mind-over-matter attitude towards our trials and afflictions. We should embrace them joyfully, like reuniting with long-awaited friends. And the reason we can is because they are all there ultimately because it is in the good wisdom of our God to providentially have them there. Why? Count it all... Continue Reading
Tempted From Without, Yet Without Sin
Fallenness is inherently a moral quality.
For humans to be born “fallen” is for them to be born in iniquity and conceived in sin, to stand as the inheritor of original sin, means that by nature we are “altogether averse from that [spiritual] good, and dead in sin” (WCF 9.3). It means that we are born with an “original corruption, whereby... Continue Reading