With Our Bridegroom: Now, Not Yet, and at the End
The Church is the bride for whom Christ laid down His life.
Wait on your Lord. Wait as His covenant bride, held fast not by our promises to Him but His promises to us. His covenant love will carry us to the day He returns. He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus” (Revelation 22:20). It... Continue Reading
Consent Thou Not
If those who live according to a pattern of sin encourage us to do something evil or foolish, we should not consent.
While the selfish person believes they’re setting a trap for others, they’re actually setting a trap for themselves. Their ill-gotten gain turns out to be no gain at all. It’s a curse and a ticking time bomb that will most certainly go off. Proverbs 1:8-19 Whether we’re young and still under the authority of... Continue Reading
When Nothing is Working
Faithful leadership is less like managing a factory and more like tending a field.
Church leadership often works ‘underground’. Sermons reshape thinking long before behaviour changes. Pastoral conversations soften hearts long before repentance shows. Prayer alters spiritual ground long before revival appears. Sometimes, nothing seems to work. Many—perhaps most—church leaders have experienced this, though it’s often hard to admit. Here are some examples. You pray faithfully, but the... Continue Reading
Children Are Greater Than Our Desires
“Babies aren’t a tool for adult validation,” and other messages society seems primed to hear.
The line has been crossed. The cost is our kids. It’s time to fight back—with truth, courage, and conviction. It is our responsibility to give kids their identity, security, and childhood back. Recently, singer Meghan Trainor posted a picture of herself in a hospital bed, teary-eyed, and holding a newborn for skin-to-skin contact. The woman who carried and... Continue Reading
Resurrection and the Theology of the Body
The resurrection is true hope because it’s not just bliss in the heavens, it’s the remaking of the world.
Both what we think the future holds (our telos) and what we think the story we live on is (our imaginary) dictate how we receive the world and understand our being within it. It’s common in evangelical circles for people to talk about ‘going to heaven when they die.’ It’s common in slightly different evangelical circles... Continue Reading
Fundamentalism, Modernism, and the Dangerous Middle (Part 3)
Many have lost their saltiness because they refuse to suffer hardship, persecution, and being reviled for their faith.
The middle ground has proven to be not only ineffective, but deadly. May the Lord raise up more courageous Christians who are not afraid to speak up for truth, even if it may cost them friends and influence in this life. In my last two posts (read them here and here), I laid out... Continue Reading
Drawn by the Father
On Effectual Calling (WCF 10.1–10.4)
Our salvation is a miracle of sovereign grace from start to finish. If you love Christ today, it is not because you were smarter than your neighbor, or more sensitive, or more moral. It is because the God who commanded light to shine out of darkness has shone in your heart. In Chapter 9,... Continue Reading
Right or Wrong? 1925-2025 on Church and State
A series reviewing a century of attempts for religion to impact politics in America.
Churches are always affected by societal and economic changes; constant vigilance is needed, while not losing our mission. Along the way, we ask: Where mistakes were made that we do not wish to repeat? Part 1. Christian Century? World War I was supposed to be the ‘war to end all wars.’ It wasn’t—not close.... Continue Reading
6 Ways Predestination Is an Outworking of God’s Love
All that God does, He ultimately does to glorify Himself and to exalt the beauty of His steadfast love.
The ultimate goal of divine election, that is to say, the preeminent reason why God did not leave all humanity in the just reward of their sin, was so that the glory of his steadfast love and grace might be praised. God’s Spiritual Family Predestination is that act in eternity past in which God... Continue Reading
“His Own Son,” that is, “Legitimate, Distinctive, Essential, and Special Sonship”
The One who is Son by nature died for us who are not sons by nature.
The point of Paul’s gospel proclamation is to relate these two kinds of sonship, but the relation is only possible because of the infinite qualitative distinction between them. When he wants to make the ultimate claim about the greatness of God’s love, Paul puts it into the ultimate perspective: He compares it to the... Continue Reading
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