Are Moral Truths a Product of Culture?
Moral relativists believe cultures and people groups create their moral codes rather than discover them.
Cultures may recognize and employ moral principles, but this doesn’t mean they created these principles. In fact, many scientists and philosophers are suspicious about any causal relationship between evolution and moral virtue. The evolutionary process often results in disharmony and strife; morality seems to require us to overcome the “evolved beast” in each of us.... Continue Reading
Book Review: Christian Journaling or Psychic Channeling?
Brenna Scott’s well-documented book demonstrates that the Jesus Calling series of devotional books align more closely with occult psychic channeling than with anything truly Christian.
Christian Journaling or Psychic Channeling? dramatically unmasks many Christian-sounding ideas set forth in Jesus Calling by comparing them to what Scripture really says and means in context. [This] work is an excellent, biblical resource for Christians who might otherwise be deceived by the lure of Jesus Calling, or those who have known something was amiss but struggled... Continue Reading
Sharing Christ’s Sufferings
There is a cup of suffering every disciple must drink.
If somehow you started your Christian life without someone explaining that you were signing up for suffering, it’s time to break it to you: there is no such thing as a Christian life without suffering. There is a line in a well-known story of Jesus (Matt 20:20-28) that often gets overlooked. James and John... Continue Reading
All the Dark We Cannot See
If we were to taste upon our conversion all the sin we now do battle against, our souls would surely have wasted away.
The more holy we become through Christ’s life in us, the more sin we will see in ourselves. There is less sin than before, but we hate it more. We begin to see evil through the eyes of Jesus Himself; that is, we begin to despise it for the filth it truly is. For... Continue Reading
William H. Green, Apologist for the Old Testament
Green often defended the Old Testament's divine inspiration and supernatural origin against the theories of higher criticism.
W.H. Green was honored with the Doctor of Divinity by both Princeton University in 1857 and the University of Edinburgh in 1884, to which was added the LL.D. by Rutgers College in 1873. In 1868, he was elected to succeed President Maclean at Princeton University, which he declined, but he did serve the university as... Continue Reading
The “Rodney Dangerfield” of Creation
Mature Creation is a recognition of the omnipotence of God, of a power so great that it disquiets us and brings us to silence before the One whose ways are not like our own.
Had Adam fulfilled the Covenant of Works, he would have been granted an end to his probation and been brought into eternal life. Just as Adam’s fulfillment of the covenant would have presumably resulted in physical changes to creation, so perhaps his failure resulted in corresponding changes. This, of course, is speculative. But it is... Continue Reading
What God Meant is What God Means
God’s original meaning still applies today.
God’s word is applicable in each generation, and surely there are ways to apply God’s word today that the original hearers would not have considered thousands of years ago. But the encouragement, the commands, the original intentions are the same. It is a glorious task to search out God’s word. “It is the glory... Continue Reading
Remaining in Neverland
Younger Americans are not learning how to stand on their own two feet.
Many baby boomers removed the burden of social expectations and duties from their children (including the duty to provide grandchildren) in the name of freedom. But it turns out that there is no freedom to move in zero gravity—you just float aimlessly. By refusing to weigh their children down with norms and hard economic realities,... Continue Reading
Churches Can Provide a Safe Environment for Turning Away from Addiction
When we are willing to be honest, it lays the foundation for genuine repentance and change.
As you get deeper into addiction, you get better and better at covering your tracks and deceiving other people. You believe your own lie that, “Things aren’t that bad.” You learn to hide your actions from family and healthy friends. You avoid God and the thought of God in every way you can. Honesty may... Continue Reading
The Church of Empathy
Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love, Power, and Justice in an American Church.
The story of these sincere Anabaptist-type progressives has confirmed me, a Presbyterian, in my commitment to an Augustinian anthropology and belief in the importance of Scripture as normative for doctrine and life. Calvin once declared that doctrine without zeal is like a sword in the hand of a lunatic. One of the many lessons of... Continue Reading
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