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Home/Lifestyle

Calvin’s Sermons on the Beatitudes: Paul Helm Review

This is a gem of a book, an excellent introduction to Calvin the preacher and Calvin the man.

Written by Paul Helm | Monday, October 30, 2023

It goes without saying that these sermons bear little or no resemblance to the After Dinner Speeches that nowadays often pass for sermons. No opening jokes to settle the refugees and the Genevois, to put them at their ease. Somehow, putting people at ease was not Calvin’s style. Did Jesus do that? It is interesting to reflect... Continue Reading

Faithfully Present

Book Review: Ramsey talks about the two kinds of limitations that all of us face: location and time.

Written by Darryl Dash | Friday, October 27, 2023

Ramsey’s book is not one that taught me anything new. Instead, it’s a book that reminds me of a Puritan work. It takes a couple of significant thoughts and turns them over slowly in our minds, teasing out the implications in a way that can change our lives. Ramsey deals first with the limitations of... Continue Reading

Southern Presbyterians and the Roots of American Philosemitism

Southern Presbyterians displayed an early and pronounced streak of philosemitism in an era when Jewish life in the United States could still be precarious.

Written by Miles Smith | Thursday, October 26, 2023

Like other southern Presbyterians—James Henley Thornwell, Daniel Baker, and John B. Adger among others all recorded marked sympathy for Jews in their writings—Palmer displayed noticeable philosemitism in an era when Jews were still routinely persecuted in Roman Catholic and Islamic societies, as well as in Lutheran monarchies in Europe.    In the inaugural volume of The... Continue Reading

Providence and Empire

An Augustinian Case: The Fact of Empire

Written by Daniel Strand | Thursday, October 26, 2023

So why does God give Rome its empire? As I mentioned earlier, Augustine thinks part of the answer is that Rome was the best option on offer. But he goes further. He argues that Roman leaders and society had a love for their city and empire that was noble if flawed. As opposed to rulers... Continue Reading

The Devoted Mind

Seeking God's Face in a World of Distraction—Book Review

Written by Tim Challies | Wednesday, October 25, 2023

The purpose of Lundgaard’s book is to draw our attention to the Beloved—to the triune God. It is to draw our attention to Him, not so we can admire Him from a safe and comfortable distance, but so we can truly draw near to Him.    We make a lot of all the distractions that... Continue Reading

What to Expect When Battling Sin

Always remember that you are to follow God’s instructions in dealing with it.

Written by Tim Challies | Thursday, October 19, 2023

While the battle is long and fierce, “He who is in us is greater than he who is in the world.” Therefore we should expect to see frequent successes shown in significant and measurable victories over our sin. “Frequent success against any lust is another part and evidence of mortification. By success I understand not... Continue Reading

Distinctives of Puritan Preaching: Dignity

The Puritan preacher saw his office as one of dignity and importance, character and content.

Written by Don Kistler | Thursday, October 19, 2023

Puritan minister did not spare his pulpit efforts. He preached for an hour or two once or twice and sometimes three times a week—that is, always once or twice on Sundays, often at a week-day lecture, and occasionally on days of fasting, of thanksgiving, and election. His sermon content was based directly on the Bible,... Continue Reading

The Marquis de Sade – the Progressive Prophet?

For progressives, when they get their values, it’s like drinking salt water. Their thirst is never satisfied.

Written by David Robertson | Monday, October 16, 2023

For de Sade culture is relative. You can trust only yourself and your feelings – especially your sexual desires. They are your authentic self so you must do what you want and live your own truth. Freud accepted Sade’s proposition that sexual identity is fundamental to your identity and that it is bad to suppress... Continue Reading

Discernment and Judging

Yes we must discern and we must judge.

Written by Bill Muehlenberg | Monday, October 16, 2023

Jesus prohibits a critical spirit, but does not forbid all use of the critical faculty. To follow Jesus, we must therefore discover why he says, “Judge not,” in Matthew 7, but says, “Judge with right judgment,” in John 7. Notice first that Jesus tells His disciples to make judgments in the very chapter that says “Judge... Continue Reading

Scholasticism for Evangelicals: Thoughts on “All That Is in God” by James Dolezal

Until a better way appears (perhaps in the new Heavens and new Earth) I intend to follow the biblical depictions of the Father, Son, and Spirit as a holy family, both in Heaven and on Earth, analogous to our earthly families, with a unity far beyond what any society of human beings is capable of.

Written by John Frame | Monday, October 16, 2023

I am grateful to God for giving to James Dolezal substantial gifts of theological knowledge and intelligence. But insofar as he desires to convict most of his colleagues of heresy, I cannot join him on the side of the prosecution. Rather, I am hoping that in time Dolezal will develop a more mature way of... Continue Reading

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