President Eisgruber’s Message To Princeton Community On Removal Of Woodrow Wilson Name From Public Policy School And Wilson College
Board of Trustees concludes that Wilson’s racist views and policies make him an inappropriate namesake for the School of Public and International Affairs and residential college
Wilson’s segregationist policies make him an especially inappropriate namesake for a public policy school. When a university names a school of public policy for a political leader, it inevitably suggests that the honoree is a model for students who study at the school. This searing moment in American history has made clear that Wilson’s racism... Continue Reading
Samuel Davies – Preacher, Father, and Poet
Davies never strayed from his ultimate goal of bringing men and women into God’s kingdom.
A poet at heart, Davies continued to write poems throughout his ministry, both for his personal use and the encouragement of others. Some were turned into hymns, making him the earliest colonial hymn-writer. As other pastors at that time, he wrote some of these hymns to accompany his sermons. One of these, “Great God of... Continue Reading
Small Beginnings: C. H. Spurgeon at Waterbeach
While the outcome remains in God’s hands, Spurgeon’s life reminds us not to despise these small beginnings (Zech. 4:10).
Spurgeon did not shrink back from criticisms, but persevered in doing his best, looking to God, not man, for blessing. And God did bless his preaching beyond what he could have imagined. Reflecting on what God accomplished during his short two years, Spurgeon writes, “In a short time, the little thatched chapel was crammed, the... Continue Reading
The Last Days of William Tyndale
The gifted linguist would suffer greatly for the sake of Christ.
We have in William Tyndale an example of a faithful servant who did not shrink from trying to better his conditions, yet he was nevertheless content to suffer for the sake of Jesus Christ, if necessary. At length, however, we read of the translator’s true desire: “But most of all I beg and beseech your clemency... Continue Reading
Time on our Hands: Jonathan Edwards on the Preciousness of Time
Edwards reminds us that time is the scarcest of commodities.
To spur his congregation to consider the value of time, Edwards wrote two compelling sermons, one called, “The Preciousness of Time, and the Importance of Redeeming it,” and the other, “Procrastination, or, The Sin and Folly of Depending on Future Time.” Edwards understood that how we choose to spend our time reflects our desires and... Continue Reading
A Man on Mission
John Calvin’s gaze was Godward. He was a pious man, driven by God’s majesty and a love for Scripture.
Calvin understood the absolute contrast between the sinfulness of man and the majesty of God, what theologians refer to as the Creator-creature distinction. In a typical lucid moment, the French reformer writes, “… Man is never sufficiently touched and affected by the awareness of his lowly state until he has compared himself with God’s majesty.”... Continue Reading
Another Famous Evangelical Apostatizes: What Does It Mean?
Jon Steingard posted a letter explaining why he was compelled to declare his apostasy from the Christian faith.
The absence of Jesus from his confession must mean something. We all have implicit faith in something. Steingard has placed his implicit faith somewhere other than Jesus (one suspects that he locates it now in himself) and so Christ is absent from his account. God the Son became incarnate. He was born of the Virgin.... Continue Reading
Olaudah Equiano – Waking Up Christians to the Evils of Slavery
In 1788, Equiano sent a letter to Queen Charlotte on behalf of all Africans, asking her to intercede in their favor.
The following year, he published his autobiography, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano. It was not the first book of this kind, but it was unique in many ways. Using the marketing skills he had acquired in his career, Equiano chose to self-publish and to promote the book by finding a large... Continue Reading
Ravi Zacharias: A Tribute
Arguably, no one has done more to advance Christian apologetics during the last fifty years than Ravi Zacharias.
In his numerous books, hundreds of radio programs, and dozens of lectures on college campuses and to religious organizations, Zacharias insisted Christianity provides the most compelling explanation of the origin of the universe and humanity, the meaning of life, morality, and human destiny. He used arguments drawn from logic, emotions, and morality to cogently defend... Continue Reading
Should Christians Be Nice?
Paul did not say speaking the truth is love, rather, he said speak the truth lovingly.
Harshness has its place. But it should not characterize our total life. The world should be able to recognize our love for one another as the sign of our being in Christ. It keeps us in the vine. If we eschew niceness (however we exactly define it) and embrace harshness, we will not be recognized... Continue Reading
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