Who Was Jesus? On Historical Inquiry
If a person is doing research on a historical person or event he needs to assemble the sources in a right, proper, and honest way.
The next time you read or hear a critic attacking the NT portrait of Christ by quoting other sources (like the ‘Gospel of Thomas’ or Q), remember that they have a certain bias and are not using the sources in a right, proper, or honest way. Don’t let the critics shake your confidence in Christ... Continue Reading
The Grand Design: A Review
It’s time to pay attention to what’s being taught in the name of complementarianism.
I believe that the view of complementarianism taught by Strachan and Peacock in The Grand Design is a dangerous distortion of Biblical truth. They start with a faulty and unorthodox understanding of the Trinity. They build on that foundation a narrow and unhelpfully limited view of the nature of men and women. They elevate their understanding of gender... Continue Reading
Book Review: Trouble I’ve Seen
Hart’s idea of isolating and dismantling overt racialism apart from a plan that includes nonwhite minorities as co-laborers in the multi-ethnic family of Christ is inadequate and destined to fail.
Throughout the book, Hart demonstrates in himself the inherent difficulty of negotiating the condemnation of white Christians for preserving a racialized culture while at the same time desiring to be acknowledged and addressed, racially. To be clear, if it’s wrong for white Christians to engage in racial preservation for divisiveness, it’s also wrong for non-whites... Continue Reading
Most Emphatically Not By Works
Nothing we do before we are converted, during our conversion, or after our conversion counts in our justification.
This isn’t just theological nitpicking. If we muddle this and put our works in the mix of justification, we are 1) saying grace is no longer grace, 2) declaring that Christ’s work isn’t perfectly sufficient, 3) denying clear NT teaching, 4) opening the door to pride, and 5) robbing the Christian’s assurance in Christ (among... Continue Reading
Challenging Darwin
These 40 books show a great intellectual ferment among critics of evolution
“WORLD normally reviews individual books rather than movements, but readers have sent letters asking for coverage of whole fields such as poverty-fighting, religious liberty, and others—and the most requests have been for an overall look at what’s going on in the creation/evolution battle.” Despite decades of urging, most Americans still do not believe Darwinist... Continue Reading
The Real John Knox
Dawson introduces us to Knox as a family man, a Christian brother, and a believer
“What a pleasure, then, to read Jane Dawson’s recent biography, simply titled John Knox, where we meet Knox the man. His life was a remarkable one by any account. He was the key figure not only in the Scottish Reformation, but also a major player in the Reformation in England and on the Continent.” If... Continue Reading
Enchanting Faith: The Chronicles of Narnia and the Power of Myth
Why are C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia - especially their showcase opener, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe - so popular, more than fifty years after their author's death?
“For Lewis, a myth is a story which evokes awe, enchantment and inspiration, and which conveys or embodies an imaginative expression of the deepest meanings of life – meanings that prove totally elusive in the face of any attempt to express them in purely abstract or conceptual forms. For Lewis, God authorizes the use of... Continue Reading
The Federal Vision and Grace
Federal Vision’s denial that regeneration represents “a permanent change in the hearts” of God’s people changes the meaning of the biblical gospel and also of the grace of God.
It is not enough, therefore, that the adherents of the Federal Vision speak about grace. What do they mean by the use of the word grace? Is it the internal, subjective, efficacious grace bestowed by the Holy Spirit in regeneration? Or is it external, objective, and non-efficacious “grace” bestowed by water baptism? These are questions... Continue Reading
Reflective Review: “Heal Us, Emmanuel”
A review of “Heal Us, Emmanuel: A Call for Racial Reconciliation, Representation, and Unity in the Church”
I am encouraged that a few of the Overtures (Overture 1 and 50 in particular) this year names particular sins, and directs the bodies of the church (presbyteries and local churches) to examine if and where they have occurred to address them at that level. I hope specificity and localness are embraced by the Assembly.... Continue Reading
Beyond Original Sin?
How Denis Lamoureux’s ‘evolutionary creation’ leads to heresy and the undermining of the Gospel
The Bible teaches that a person is either ‘in Adam’ or ‘in Christ’. If we are ‘in Adam’ we are still in sin and under God’s judgement; if we are ‘in Christ’ we become partakers of His righteousness and escape judgement (Romans 5:18–19). There was a literal Adam, through whom we literally became sinners and... Continue Reading
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