Against the Communion of Rome on the Worship of Images
They who make images divide Christ’s two, inseparable natures in the minds of men, who are trained by images to think of a fantasy of his human nature, and not that eminent return which shall consummate our salvation.
If Christ is “the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature” (Heb. 1:3), and if it is absolutely impermissible to portray God, as Rome herself says in Catechism 2129, then how can it be right to portray him who is the image and revelation of God? For if the... Continue Reading
Zion, the City of God
The climax of God’s redemptive plan centers on the coming together of heaven and earth.
The expectation of a future city of God runs throughout the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation. According to Hebrews, the patriarch Abraham looked forward to “the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God” (Heb. 11:10, NIV). The expectation of a transformed Jerusalem is a dominant theme in the oracles of the Old Testament... Continue Reading
Why a Consumer Mentality Doesn’t Work at Church
We have the supernatural gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ at work in our hearts.
I think consumerism particularly bites hard against God’s plan for a church made of people who share little in common other than Jesus Christ. The fact is that we have the gospel at work in our lives, and we want to show it off. It’s like you have the special edition Camaro. You don’t want... Continue Reading
Reflections on Forty Years of Being Born Again
God’s chastening is always good for me, though I am sometimes a slow learner.
God employs loss and its accompanying grief to strip me of inferior objects of trust and sources of joy and anchor my soul more securely to Christ. Fear is a powerful enemy and an opponent of childlike faith. Suffering is the most powerful instrument of the Spirit for exposing my heart’s sin and false trust.... Continue Reading
How Did We Get Here (Part Two)
The problem for the church is not a culture to be fixed with a different moral ordering, but a spiritual problem of men and women in need of reconciliation to God.
Looking and sounding like the world mutes the true spiritual difference between the world and the Christian message. The entire progressive project is an attempt to create an ethos within the church to address the problem of church attendance as if that was the first concern of the church. Now the music, the message, the... Continue Reading
2024 Year in Review: The Top 40 Christian Headlines (Part 1)
The United Methodist Church overturns its ban on LGBTQ clergy.
The UMC now joins the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church USA, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and the United Church of Christ as being among those to ordain gay clergy. Christ has removed his lamp stand from these churches (Revelation 2:5), and the Holy Spirit is not there. Interestingly enough, the liberal African Methodist... Continue Reading
How Do I Live Through a Season of Darkness?
We must wait for the Lord, cry to him, and know that our own self-indictment, rendered in the darkness, is not as sure as God’s word spoken in the light.
We can draw no deadlines for God. He hastens or he delays as he sees fit. And his timing is all-loving toward his children. Oh, that we might learn to be patient in the hour of darkness. Darkness Is Normal It will be of great advantage to the struggling Christian to remember that seasons of... Continue Reading
The Word and Prayer
The word of God not only rouses our souls by the adrenaline of praise, it nourishes our beings for the conduct of life.
The truth of God’s Word will sink deep into our beings, assimilated by the digestive juices of prayer to our spiritual nourishment and growth in grace. Our very beings are affected, sustained, fortified, and changed. By the Spirit, that embraced Word will accomplish the purpose intended for us in it. Prayer in Nehemiah (15) “And... Continue Reading
Don’t Be a Partial Christian
Partial Bible makes only a partial Christian.
Few dare to plunge into the unusual laws and regulations of Leviticus, the troubling histories of Judges, the long prophecies of Isaiah and Ezekiel. Yet if each of these books is from God and ultimately about God, then each book teaches us how we can best honor God. The Bible is a canon, an authoritative... Continue Reading
The Theology of Christmas
What is a Mediator?
“It pleased God, in His eternal purpose, to choose and ordain the Lord Jesus, His only begotten Son, to be the Mediator between God and man, the Prophet, Priest, and King, the Head and Savior of His Church, the Heir of all things, and Judge of the world; unto whom He did from all eternity... Continue Reading
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