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Home/Biblical and Theological

3 Things that Keep Christians from Living with a Sense of Urgency

Not one of us knows when Jesus will return. It could be… now. Or now. Or now.

Written by Michael Kelley | Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Before we come to understand the good news of Jesus Christ, we must come to understand the grave news of sin. Whether we know it or not, all of us are in the most real and the most grave of danger apart from the gospel. Not one of us knows which breath will be our... Continue Reading

Union with Christ is Everything

The New Testament uses a wide variety of Greek constructions to describe Christians' connection with their Savior and Lord Jesus Christ.

Written by Joshua Steely | Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Believers are “crucified with Christ,” “raised with Christ,” “in Christ Jesus,” “baptized into Christ Jesus,” “sanctified in Christ Jesus,” “circumcised by Christ,” and reconciled to God “through Christ.” Christ’s disciples are related to Him as branches to the life-giving vine. In Christ, believers receive “every spiritual blessing,” including election (v.4), predestination (v.5), adoption (v.5), grace... Continue Reading

When Humpty Met Alice: Some Thoughts on Systematic Theology as Poor Relation, Part Four

When it comes to the meaning of the classic vocabulary of Reformed theology, the question is: Which is to be master, that’s all -- in this case, the Confession or the reader?

Written by Carl Trueman | Tuesday, February 19, 2019

I want to highlight the fact that the issue of the ST-BT relationship is not just theological and pedagogical. For confessional Protestants, it is also ecclesiastical because ministers take vows to uphold the faith as summarized in the great confessions of the Reformation.  Since those confessions were forged through the kind of dialectical doctrinal process which I noted in Part Two, it is highly questionable whether... Continue Reading

Incomprehensible but Knowable: Human Knowing

"For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts."

Written by Tim Bertolet | Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Not only are we never going to be able to truly know all that God knows, we are never going to be able to know in the way that God knows things. In other words, when God knows something He understands all of it. For Himself, He knows Himself completely and in absolute perfection. When He knows... Continue Reading

10 Things You Should Know about Common Grace

Most of us have close friends and relatives who are not Christians but who are, what we would feel justified in calling, “good” people.

Written by Sam Storms | Tuesday, February 19, 2019

The truth of God’s common grace is driven home when we ask how it is that people who lie under the wrath of God experience so many good gifts at the hand of God. How do we account for the extraordinary gifts, talents, and accomplishments of those who are unregenerate? How is it that so... Continue Reading

Here I Raise My Ebenezer

The Inspiration for ‘Come Thou Fount’

Written by David Mathis | Tuesday, February 19, 2019

The meaning of Ebenezer originates more than a thousand years before Christ, during the ministry of the prophet Samuel, who played a pivotal role at a key juncture in the history of God’s people. Long has he been remembered as one of Israel’s greatest figures, alongside names like Moses and David. God raised up Samuel as the... Continue Reading

Waiting When God Seems Silent

What about when we wait and listen, with seemingly no response from God?

Written by Randy Alcorn | Monday, February 18, 2019

The call to wait on God is an invitation to trust and hope. It entails believing that one day — even if today is not that day — he will make all things right. In times of waiting, as we seek God in prayer, we must learn to listen to him as well as talk to him... Continue Reading

Sabbath Rest – Part 2

In Exodus 20 we find the codification of the Sabbath into law, given to Israel at Mt. Sinai and then the renewal of the covenant in Deuteronomy 5.

Written by John | Monday, February 18, 2019

In the Fourth Commandment we see the concept for six days of work, which is just as commanded as the one day of rest, followed by the Sabbath observance  on the seventh day.  The widespread, nondiscriminatory nature of the observance, which simply includes “no work”, extends from the individual, to family, to servants, to livestock,... Continue Reading

Incomprehensible but Knowable: A Lisping God

The God of the Bible, the Creator, is too great to enclose in the limits of creaturely minds.

Written by Steven McCarthy | Monday, February 18, 2019

Though pastors in training often earn Masters of Divinity degrees, they simply cannot master God, but can only be mastered by him, or fail to be. How then can we know God, if he is beyond us? Together with affirming God’s “incomprehensibility,” Calvin emphasized that God graciously overcomes our natural inability so that we truly... Continue Reading

An Everlasting Meal

In God’s wisdom, the death of Christ would coincide with the Passover feast.

Written by Aaron L. Garriott | Sunday, February 17, 2019

Jesus supplies the primary purpose of this new covenant feast: “Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me” (1 Cor. 11:25). Paul clarifies that this mandate has an expiration date: “For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes” (v. 26, emphasis... Continue Reading

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