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Home/Featured

Getting to Know Him

Catechesis at its best is a very personal 'school of faith.'

Written by Philip Harrold, Christianity Today | Sunday, September 30, 2012

Catechesis begins by recognizing that the Christian life is as much about union with Christ as receiving the benefits of his saving work. It's about 'getting saved,' yes, but also growing in him.

A Barrier To Honesty

Why I Can't Stand 'Accountability Groups'

Written by Tullian Tchividjian | Sunday, September 30, 2012

Listen carefully: Christianity is not first and foremost about our behavior, our obedience, our response, and our daily victory over sin—as important as all these are. It is not first and foremost about us at all–it is first and foremost about Jesus!   One of the chief vehicles for dishonesty in my own life has... Continue Reading

“The Pagans Believe the Earth Is Round; Therefore It Must Be Flat”

Christians have nothing to fear from the study of the natural world.

Written by Ken Keathley, SEBTS | Sunday, September 30, 2012

One of the more fascinating sections of the book is Cosmas’ account of when the flat-earthers and the round-earthers met in Alexandria for a debate. Each side presented arguments, counter-arguments, and even conducted experiments. Evidently Cosmas believed his side won. He reported to his mentor, “And it is the truth I speak, O most God-beloved Father, through the power of Christ they went away dumbfounded and sadly crestfallen, having been put to shame by our exposure of their fictions.”

Book Briefs

Six recent books, three from the 'Dutch Tradition'

Written by Kevin DeYoung | Sunday, September 30, 2012

Authors include: Monica Duffy Toft, Daniel Philpott, Timothy Samuel Shah; R. C. Sproul; Doug Coleman; Idzerd Van Dellen, Martin Monsma; G.D. Cloete, D.J. Smit; Piet J. Naude

Blocking the Shots

Many homeschoolers are taking unnecessary risks by withholding common vaccines from their children

Written by Daniel James Devine, WNS | Sunday, September 30, 2012

All 50 states require vaccination for public-school attendance, permitting exemptions for medical reasons. All except Mississippi and West Virginia allow religious exemptions, and 20 states let parents skip their students’ shots for “philosophical” reasons—often a firmly held belief that vaccines are ineffective or harmful. An Associated Press reporter found the rate of vaccine exemptions has... Continue Reading

Why Tiny Papyrus Triggered a Big Media Stir

Four centuries from the implied wedding of Jesus to this "evidence" is the amount of time from the writing of the Mayflower Compact to our own

Written by Martin Marty | Sunday, September 30, 2012

We can put this kind of media event into perspective by noting that each such unearthing of non-canonical ancient Christian texts receives publicity in direct proportion to attention being given to particular controversial issues in the contemporary world.

Just Disconnect

Solitude helps prevent our lives becoming a permanent public performance.

Written by Carl Trueman | Saturday, September 29, 2012

Privacy and solitude has just about vanished from our world and the strange thing is that we seem to love that fact. Moronic tweeting about routine daily activities, the constant rattle of texts, planes full of people who can barely wait for the wheels to touchdown before they need to switch on their iPhones: it is surely strange that the idea of being alone with one's thoughts for even a moment has now become something which seems to terrify people or at least be most undesirable

Why Does Complementarian Rhyme with Egalitarian?

If complementarianism lacks the deal breaker significance of the gospel, so too does women’s ordination.

Written by D. G. Hart | Saturday, September 29, 2012

I do think the Gospel Coalition’s rallying behind complementarianism is troubling. It resembles the version of Calvinism that traffics among the young and restless — lots of talk of divine sovereignty, not so much about limited atonement. After all, that biblical teaching and those Reformed creeds can sound reactionary to modern ears and we don’t ever want to sound extreme

Just Keep Pedaling

This is God's promise: "He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion on the day of Jesus Christ"

Written by Chris Castaldo, Billy Graham Center | Saturday, September 29, 2012

Keep pedaling, son, despite your fears. I know all the bumps in the road, and, although you falter and even wipe out, my grace surrounds you to the end.

Football: The Moral Hazard

"…professional football is the American civic religion in its most celebrated ritual form."

Written by Martin E. Marty, Sightings | Saturday, September 29, 2012

First, does the physical harm to the contestants challenge Christian teachings on stewardship of the body, and are acts which defile the image of God permissible? Second, he worries about "the moral harm to the spectators," and about what the celebration of violence with intention to do harm to "the other" does. Third, the pagan cultural rituals back then competed with Christian rites.

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