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Home/Featured

Normalizing Pedophilia: The Implication of Ordaining Men who Experience Unnatural Lust

Is it permissible to ordain to church office a man who experiences the unnatural lust of desiring other men if he refrains from acting upon it, recognizes it is sinful, and otherwise assents to the historic Christian position on marriage and sexual morality in both word and deed?

Written by Tom Hervey | Monday, February 2, 2026

But I’m not interested in society, which is doomed to pass away (“the world is passing away along with its desires,” 1 Jn. 2:17), but in the church. Tell me, reader, how can the church be guiltless of partiality, inconsistency, and hypocrisy if it makes certain unnatural immorality nameable in polite Christian society, but wishes... Continue Reading

America Is Not Losing Whiteness. It’s Losing Christ.

The Christ who once confronted pagan Europe and formed Christian nations is now put on trial by a nation that daily rejects His authority.

Written by Virgil Walker | Monday, February 2, 2026

We Christians must stop mistaking cultural memory for Christian faith. Nostalgia is not belief. Border enforcement, while a great beginning, alone is not enough. Some may place their hopes for renewal in political or cultural shifts. Others place their hope in a model of assimilation where immigrants replenish the ranks but hold to American values—this... Continue Reading

Is Carney’s Davos Sermon the Way Forward?

Is there hope? Yes, but it is not in Carney’s Brave New World.

Written by David Robertson | Monday, February 2, 2026

Canada is a great example of what happens to a society when it abandons its Christian heritage. Just as the globalists have killed globalism, so the progressives are killing progressivism. Once people see it in practice, they realise how dangerous and destructive it is.  But where do they turn? Some of the alternatives are chilling... Continue Reading

5 Reasons You Need Sabbath Rest

Sabbath rest reorients our pilgrimage.

Written by Megan Hill | Monday, February 2, 2026

Sabbath rest is a regular nudge for Christian pilgrims: Stop here and orient yourself. Reflect on your journey. Set your heart on your goal. One day a week, we have a chance to take stock of where we’ve been.    Everyone I know is longing for rest. The teenagers in my life are worn out with studying, extra-curriculars,... Continue Reading

Answering Objections to the Regulative Principle

Here are seven possible objections to the RPW—and some answers to them.

Written by Mitch Chase | Monday, February 2, 2026

Let me be blunt: if you think praying, singing, preaching, Scripture reading, and the ordinances are cold and stale, the problem isn’t with those elements of corporate worship. The problem may be your heart. Now it is certainly possible that leaders and church members can go through the motions of a service’s liturgy and be void... Continue Reading

Learning from the Puritans about Biblical Meditation

The Puritans wholeheartedly followed the command of Paul to be about the business of being transformed through the renewal of their mind (Rom. 12:2).

Written by Justin Craft | Monday, February 2, 2026

The Puritans were not content with a mere head knowledge of God and Christ. Their chief desire in their meditation was to fan the flames of their desire for Christ and to look more like him in their thoughts, words, and deeds. Consequently the Puritans have given us a wonderful example of how faithful biblical... Continue Reading

From One Man, Many Nations: A Theological Reading of the Table of Nations (Gen. 10:1–32)

“Table of Nations” reminds us that while the world is vast and filled with diverse cultures and languages, it all stems from one family.

Written by Tony Arsenal | Monday, February 2, 2026

Genesis 10 leaves us with a map of the world that is defined by God’s sovereignty. It tells us that the nations are not accidents of history. As Paul would later preach in Athens, God “made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted... Continue Reading

Jesus, Judgment, Fire and Division

We need to embrace these hard words of Jesus.

Written by Bill Muehlenberg | Monday, February 2, 2026

“If somebody asked you, “Why did Jesus come into this world?” I doubt you would have answered that he came to cast fire on the earth. But that’s what He said here. He’s not only announced that He was going to send fire on the earth, but he communicated his own feelings about that task,... Continue Reading

Exceptions and Frustrations

The Sabbath as a test case.

Written by Michael Mock | Monday, February 2, 2026

Will you be content when the pastor and/or elders teach a view in line with the Standards, a view that you don’t personally hold? I say this to our shame. Many Presbyterians take exceptions, sometimes a handful of them. I say this also to our shame. When someone says he takes no exceptions, some men... Continue Reading

Cancer War Comrades and the Heidelberg Catechism (#31)

What is your only comfort in life and in death?

Written by Tim Shorey | Sunday, February 1, 2026

We are cancer comrades—and that makes for a pervasive sense of sympathy all around. The ward is a place where empathy gas seems pumped through the vents to fill the room. It’s where you can fairly safely say (even if you never actually say it), “I know what you’re feeling,” because you do; at least... Continue Reading

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