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Home/Lifestyle/Books

The Four Gospels in a Single Complete Narrative

This is a “diatessaron” (= “out of four”) of the Four Gospels edited by Lorraine Boettner.

Written by Lorraine Boettner | Monday, April 10, 2023

Loraine Boettner was following in his tradition when, in the early 1900s, he created his own diatessaron for classroom use at Pikeville College, Kentucky, where he was a professor. This book used the 1901 American Standard Version (ASV), which Boettner preferred over the King James, and was published by Presbyterian & Reformed Publishing as A... Continue Reading

Why?

Even Christians on the narrow path can experience seasons of despair and doubt.

Written by Jacob Crouch | Sunday, April 9, 2023

God allows hard things to happen, and we must acknowledge our limitations in understanding. “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the LORD. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts” (Isa 55:8-9).... Continue Reading

Were Later Versions of Christianity Radically Different than Earlier Ones? Reflecting on Recent Scholarly Claims

Book Review: After Jesus Before Christianity: A Historical Exploration of the First Two Centuries of Jesus Movements

Written by Michael J. Kruger | Friday, April 7, 2023

For those interested in the formation of the earliest Christian movement, After Jesus Before Christianity will be a fascinating read. It offers a number of provocative claims that will surely elicit reflection and curiosity in the reader. And it does make some helpful points that need to be made: e.g., early Christianity was more diverse... Continue Reading

Spurgeon and the Poor

As Spurgeon gained more exposure to the acute and diverse exigencies facing London, he aggressively launched dozens of ministries and organizations to combat suffering and poverty in the city.

Written by Alex DiPrima | Thursday, April 6, 2023

Spurgeon lived a life filled to the brim with good works of benevolence and charity. However, too few today are familiar with this vital aspect of his life and ministry nor the theological convictions that undergirded it. I have written this book because I find in Spurgeon a most compelling example of the proper wedding... Continue Reading

America’s Not-So-Great Awakening

Book Review: "American Awakening," by Joshua Mitchell

Written by Justin Dillehay | Tuesday, April 4, 2023

American Awakening is packed with biblical wisdom for Christians of every color, both sexes, and almost all political persuasions. But if you’re a Christian who’s attracted to identity politics, Mitchell wants to convince you that what’s attracting you isn’t a legitimate political extension of Christianity but rather an idolatrous substitute.   Comparing identity politics to a... Continue Reading

JC Ryle on Prayer

A Call To Prayer

Written by Stephen Kneale | Saturday, April 1, 2023

I dare not say that anyone believes until they pray. I cannot understand a dumb faith. The first act of faith will be to speak to God. Faith is to the soul what life is to the body. Prayer is to faith what breath is to the body. How a person can live and not breathe... Continue Reading

What Is Reformed Theology?

At its most basic level, the term Reformed theology refers to the theological conclusions that flowed out of the Protestant Reformation.

Written by Jonathan L. Master | Monday, March 27, 2023

Today when people in evangelical churches refer to “Reformed theology” or to “being Reformed,” they often mean something less historically grounded. It is often the case today that when someone refers to holding to “Reformed theology,” they mean that they believe that God’s sovereign grace is at work in electing and saving sinners (the doctrine... Continue Reading

‘Christianity and Liberalism’ at 100

It’s worth pointing out that this year is the 100th anniversary of this landmark work: J. Gresham Machen’s Christianity and Liberalism

Written by Chris Queen | Monday, March 27, 2023

Machen notes how liberal Christians ignore what the Bible clearly notes as sin (see how timely it is?) when he writes, “Without the consciousness of sin, the whole of the gospel will seem to be an idle tale. But how can the consciousness of sin be revived? Something no doubt, can be accomplished by the... Continue Reading

White Fragility Is Pro-Racism

Like all anti-racists, Robin DiAngelo rejects the biblical definition of racism. That’s because the biblical definition of racism is inconvenient for her racist ideology and her ridiculous concept of white fragility.

Written by Samuel Sey | Monday, March 27, 2023

Robin DiAngelo writes like a white supremacist, and according to her concept of white fragility, it would be racist for her to reject my accusation—according to her own silly standards, she would have to agree with me that she’s indeed a white supremacist.   When I was a boy in Ghana, I once had a... Continue Reading

How the False Promises of the Sexual Revolution Created a New Religion

Identitarianism: The New Religion

Written by Casey Chalk | Friday, March 24, 2023

Mary Eberstadt’s new book, “Adam and Eve After the Pill, Revisited,” agues, not only has the sexual revolution been disastrous for American society, politics, and churches, but it has become a simulacrum of a religion, with its own dogmas, creeds, and saints. One of the most arresting substories of Eberstadt’s book is how the sexual... Continue Reading

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