Exodus International’s Alan Chambers Accused of Antinomian Theology
While media outlets made much of Exodus shift on reparative therapy for gay Christians, theologians parsed president's understanding of salvation.
"The problem biblically is: legalism sends people to hell and antinomianism sends people to hell," he said. "Reacting against a hellish-legalism with a hellish-antinomianism is still sending people to hell." --R. Moore
Chasing the Religious Left’s “Wild Goose”
Over 1,000 self-identified “progressive” Christians flocked to the recent Wild Goose festival
“Paul, in the Bible, tells my wife to be silent in church. Screw St. Paul, screw him!” shouted a visibly angry Frank Schaeffer during one session of the festival. Schaeffer, son of deceased author and evangelical leader Francis Schaeffer, lamented his family’s role in building the “Religious Right,” and the gathered audience of disaffected former... Continue Reading
An Open Invitation from PCA Mission to the World Medical Missionaries
Join a Medical Missions trip to Speak to Young Christian Medical Professionals in Ukraine
Conference is being organized for October 27 and 28, 2012. Dr. Wiley Smith and Dr. Sharon Kuhn will be attending as family physicians, but they would love to have a contingent of other specialists, pharmacists, nurses, and the like to come with them to speak. Present students would be welcome too.
Vacation Idea: Christian disaster relief will be an inexpensive trip that you’ll never forget
Disaster relief, by definition, typically catches people at a point of profound need
"Some people are just wired to do this," Lanier told me. "Sometimes it's men who know they're not equipped to work in the church nursery or to sing in the church choir. But if they're like me, they can feel the smile of God as they exercise their tool skills—and because they have a chance to relate one-on-one to someone who maybe never heard the gospel of Jesus before."
Making Sense of the Mess: Infertility
Where are the sermon applications, blog posts, Christian conferences and “Gospel centered” books that deal with this issue?
Wayne Sparkman, at the PCA archives, pulled out a book of letters written by a Puritan pastor and handed it to me. He showed me a letter written to a young woman who just lost a newborn. In that, the pastor related his own pain and how God grieves with his children, but still offers hope. Reading that letter, full of real life helped me make a little sense of the mess. Five and a half years later, I hope I can help others make sense of it a little better too.
The Mission Trip That Was the ‘Pits’
There are more Malawian doctors in Manchester, England, than in Malawi
It’s time to replace an old paradigm, mission trip, with a new paradigm, empowerment. In the old paradigm, somebody comes and does something for the Africans, which they don’t maintain, because it wasn’t their idea in the first place. In the new paradigm, true development and growth take place because the Africans were involved and... Continue Reading
“Ask Jesus into Your Heart”: A History of the Sinner’s Prayer
Full of guilt, alas I am, but to thy wounds for refuge flee; Friend of sinners, spotless lamb, thy blood was shed for me…" -- G. Whitefield
Then there was a major uptick in the use of the actual phrase “ask Jesus into your heart” in the 1970s, perhaps as children’s ministry became more formalized and leaders looked for very simple ways to explain to children what a decision for Christ would entail.
That famous quote from St. Francis? He never said it
"Preach the Gospel at all times. When necessary, use words." -
"It's simply impossible to preach the Gospel without words. The Gospel is inherently verbal, and preaching the Gospel is inherently verbal behavior." --D. Lifton
Effective Preaching In A Media Age
Because it is God’s chosen medium for communicating his Word, [preaching] must be central to the ministry and worship of the church.
Every medium, and the totality of the media environment, affects, for good or ill, our relationships with God, others, the church, and God’s world; and they affect the way we perceive each of these.
The Primacy of Preaching Among the Public Duties of the Ministry
“It follows that preaching must always be a necessity, and good preaching a mighty power." - J. Broadus
Spurgeon went on to say, “It is in the pulpit that the fight will be lost or won. To us ministers, the maintenance of our power in the pulpit should be our great concern.”
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