The Apologist We Need: Clement of Alexandria
How Clement Shows How to Make Sense of Christianity
Out of this love for humanity, the Word of God became human, so that we might receive salvation. This gracious gift, for Clement, looks primarily like a regeneration of the human person: in other words, salvation means eternal life, yes, but one that looks like holiness, freedom from the passions of the flesh, and the... Continue Reading
The Comfort of Surrender
We can trust God to write our story, as we live each day in submission to His perfect will.
We can’t always control our circumstances, but we can control our response. We can cry out to the Lord and point others to Jesus, knowing we don’t have to worry about tomorrow because He is in control. I sat alone in the psychiatric hospital, sad and discouraged. After a shocking family loss, I was... Continue Reading
Providence, Vocation, and Ordinary Faithfulness
Everyday life faith.
The doctrine of providence teaches believers to reject both passivity and self-reliance. We are neither spectators in God’s world nor sovereigns over it. We are servants called to faithful obedience within the callings God has entrusted to us. After hearing that God governs all things according to the counsel of his will, many Christians... Continue Reading
Until the Shadows Flee
Anxiety and Depression in the Christian Life
In The Pilgrim’s Progress, John Bunyan’s Christian walks through the Valley of the Shadow of Death, beset by fears and terrors on every side. Yet he presses on. And at the end of his journey, he crosses the river and enters the Celestial City, where all his fears are finally put to rest. So it... Continue Reading
What Grace Teaches
Grace is teaching you. Are you listening?
Have you learned the lessons of grace? Grace does not teach us to live for ourselves, but it teaches us to live for Him.…The more we understand and love salvation by grace alone, the more zealous we will be for good works. Grace teaches us to look less like the world and more like the... Continue Reading
Presbyterians & Christian Nationalism
Do denominational declarations still matter?
Christian Nationalism is ascending thanks largely to the decline of denominations and the absence of effective gatekeepers in American Christianity. Today, American religion increasingly is led and governed by popular online personalities who are fueled by controversy. The PCA preliminary report is an intelligent resource for resistance against Christian Nationalism. But sadly, it likely will... Continue Reading
7 Reasons God Takes Pleasure in Election
The great work of salvation is rooted and grounded in the electing love of God.
The truth of election embraces the necessity of evangelism and missions and guarantees their success in God’s time and God’s way. This has been the strength and courage of thousands of faithful missionaries. The Preciousness of God’s Election by Grace What Romans 8:28–30 teaches is that God really accomplishes the complete redemption of his... Continue Reading
A Bride for the Promised Son
Providence and Prayer in the Search for Rebekah (Genesis 24:1–67)
Genesis 24 is a magnificent historical record, but it also paints a breathtaking picture of the Gospel. Consider the beautiful parallels: A bride is sought for a beloved, promised son. A faithful messenger journeys into a far country bearing news of the son’s immense inheritance. The messenger gives the bride beautiful gifts as a down payment... Continue Reading
Melton Duncan Elected Moderator of 53rd General Assembly
Duncan's Love for the PCA Fuels Goodwill Toward Pastors Across the Ideological Spectrum
Nominating Duncan was Richard Phillips, the current senior pastor of Second Presbyterian. Phillips said Duncan has the experience, competence, trust, and goodwill necessary to lead the General Assembly proceedings. He noted Duncan’s considerable experience at the Assembly and the competence with which he leads. The 53rd General Assembly has elected Melton “Mel” Duncan, ruling... Continue Reading
General Assembly Updates for Tuesday, June 23
53rd PCA General Assembly Elects Mel Duncan as Moderator and Fred Greco as Stated Clerk
The Assembly ratified most BCO amendments approved last year (with Item 3 defeated and Item 7 approved. The Overtures Committee continued its work, recommending approval for electronic meetings of committees, four-year terms for coordinators, and an amendment requiring both wine and grape juice for the Lord’s Supper at GA Assembly Convenes The 53rd General... Continue Reading
The Idols Among Us
3 lessons from the Philistines' vain efforts to prop up Dagon.
God has put His righteousness on display for all people, including the Philistines. And yet, unless our hearts are softened to the Gospel, we will wriggle every which way in order to avoid His righteousness, and cling to the more accommodating moral standards of our idols. Japanese lore has it that a powerful 17th... Continue Reading
The Rainbow-Colored Revolt on Reality
The result is confusion masquerading as enlightenment.
The world God made is not our enemy. It is our home. The distinctions God established are not prison bars. They are load-bearing walls. They hold up the roof over our heads. Tear them down and the house does not become freer. It collapses. There was a moment when I was deployed in Iraq,... Continue Reading
Honesty about Our Habits
We are becoming more like Christ or less like Him, every day.
We are in the midst of a spiritual war, and the Devil crouches at the door. Am I strengthening my defenses or undermining them? Am I doing the things that will help me to be morally and spiritually strong, or am I becoming comfortable and complacent in the midst of moral and spiritual dangers? ... Continue Reading
What to Do When You Really Mess Up
Do not pile one sin upon another—it never works.
It is never too late to repent. The time to repent is always now. You cannot go back, but you can respond in the present.…Consequences may still come, but for a true believer, it is never too late to be restored to fellowship with God. One of the most vivid biblical stories of a... Continue Reading
3 Different Kinds of Knowledge Paul Prays For
God has depths that will take an eternity to discover.
Believers love, obey, trust, worship, enjoy, and serve Christ in everything. As they do, they look ahead to an eternal future where they will see Christ face to face and live with him forever. Paul’s Prayer Believers who know God should always want to know him more, to be where he is, to meditate... Continue Reading
Not Your Garden-Variety Christian
On real-deal believers.
The genuine Christian will show by his life and by his beliefs whether or not he is truly part of God’s family. And it can be hard to tell at times, which is why we must also recognise that while folks can fool others, they cannot fool God. We now have plenty of men... Continue Reading
Separate Ways
Ministering to the theologically mismatched couple.
One spouse on fire for the recently discovered Reformed faith, devouring books on imputed righteousness, the regulative principle, and supralapsarianism, while the other wonders what’s wrong with their old Methodist (or similar) church. What counsel should pastors and churches give such couples? One of the regular patterns I observed in my pastorate was the... Continue Reading
A View from the Pew: Weighing David Garner’s Response to Letham and Tipton
This debate threatens to redraw the very boundaries of confessional orthodoxy.
This novel adoption thesis cannot survive exegetical, historical, and especially metaphysical scrutiny without compromising the unity of the incarnate Christ or the integrity of the atonement, it must be rejected as incompatible with Chalcedonian Christology. Why Add My Voice To this Watershed Issue? I cannot remain on the sidelines of this debate because the... Continue Reading
General Assembly Update for Monday, June 22
Overtures Committee Recommends Thanksgiving Observances, Rejects Women Deacons Proposal, and Advances Several BCO Clarifications
Among key recommendations: a day of prayer and fasting for revival (as amended), thanksgiving for adult professions of faith, and gratitude for the nation’s 250th anniversary. The committee also voted to keep current BCO language on deacons, rejecting overtures to allow women in the office, while advancing several targeted amendments on judicial processes, session records,... Continue Reading
When Your Truth Is Not His Truth
Truth does not belong to us. The universe does not belong to us. They belong to God.
If truth is personal, then disagreement becomes impossible. If truth is personal, correction becomes oppression. If truth is personal, morality becomes preference. If truth is personal, reality itself becomes negotiable. And if reality becomes negotiable, civilization itself begins to dissolve. This is precisely what we are witnessing today. Few phrases better summarize the insanity... Continue Reading
How the Spirit Providentially Encourages Us When We’re Burdened
This verse was an additional reminder to not grit my teeth while I endure, but to do it joyfully. Patiently.
The short biblical section I did read over breakfast was in Colossians chapter 1. It knocked straight into my discouragement. Beginning in verse 9, Paul says the Spirit gives us wisdom and understanding of God’s will so we can: 1) bear fruit through our works 2) grow in the knowledge of God 3) draw on... Continue Reading
Why Pastoral Ministry Can Be Difficult
Pastors do not persevere by sheer grit. They persevere through ordinary means of grace – Scripture, prayer, fellowship, repentance, rest, and the hope of Christ’s return.
A congregation sees the sermon on Sunday, but not the hours of study, prayer, and wrestling beforehand. They may notice a hospital visit, but not the many quiet phone calls, follow-up conversations, and intercessory prayers. They benefit from the church’s spiritual health without seeing the behind-the-scenes work of planning, conflict resolution, discipleship, and administration. This... Continue Reading
Why A Woman Serving as Senior Warden in the Anglican Church Is Analogous to the Office of Ruling Elder Though It Is “Lay Ministry” and Not Ordained
The question before us is not her character, but whether the specific authority exercised in the Senior Warden role aligns with the biblical qualifications for elder-like oversight.
We have an invisible wall of distinction between ordained ministers and the other offices. The Anglicans shape their clerical office by separating the clerical and lay offices through the use of the terms “ordained” and “commissioned,” and we do not. We ordain every officer, lay or not, and this should not confuse us as to... Continue Reading
What in the PC(USA) Is Going On?
The church does not love the world by lying to it.
Denominations do not wake up one morning debating monogamy by accident. The road from one compromise to another is not always straight and every church that stumbles in one place does not arrive at the same cliff by sundown. Still, the habit of compromise is real. Once a church learns to set aside Scripture in... Continue Reading
A Report of the RPCNA Synod 2026?
The Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America (RPCNA) met in Marion, Indiana June 16-19, 2026.
The RPCNA is made up of 86 congregations (several were recently released to form the RPC of Canada) across 7 presbyteries. Currently 10 congregations are without pastors; we are also in need of more ruling elders; and finances are stable across the denomination (we have a $37 million synod-level portfolio plus other assets). The... Continue Reading
Jesus is Supreme From the Cosmos to the Congregation
When you come to Jesus, you can know that you are coming to the One who is over all.
Jesus, the Glorious One, has been anointed and is even now at the right hand of God. And yet that same one knows what it means to be tempted in every way, just as you are. He is high above, and at the same time, infinitely down to earth. This is who you have in... Continue Reading
One Word Changed Everything: How a Latin Mistranslation Built the Sacrament of Penance
Trent would have us believe that John 20 gives us all we need to know that penance is orthodox, but it does not.
The Councils of Orange and Carthage had closed the door on this doctrine. But what was closed there was opened at Trent. The Magisterium’s reaction to the Reformation placed the pre-modern and now modern church that remains tied to Rome in contradiction with orthodoxy. This is hard for Roman Catholics to hear. Because no one... Continue Reading
Seven Things to Do to Prepare for Spiritual Warfare
If the apostle Paul could address you directly, he would encourage you to develop these seven habits in preparation for the evil day.
Paul’s metaphor of the soldier’s armor has become so familiar to many of us that we have forgotten that God (via a letter of Paul) is instructing us to do certain things in preparation for spiritual warfare. Granted, there is some disagreement among New Testament scholars about what some of these metaphors represent. But I... Continue Reading
A Summary of Actions Taken by the 46th General Assembly of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church
The Evangelical Presbyterian Church held its 46th stated General Assembly in Denver, Colorado June 16-18, 2026.
From the conclusion of our executive report (drawn from the Pastoral Letter): We affirm that only those “who conform to the biblical requirement of chastity and sexual purity in their descriptions of themselves, their convictions, character, and conduct should be considered for leadership.” Additionally, we affirm that “Courts may consider for ordination candidates whose ongoing... Continue Reading
The Lie of Living Your Truth
Your truth or The Truth? Today’s culture calls for bold proclamations in both the church and the public sphere. We must roll up our sleeves and tell the truth.
I believed the slogan “LGBTQ lives hurt no one.” My friend, a biological male who lived as a woman and was chemically castrated after years of estrogen, gave me a box of books on Christian theology. He had left the church for transgenderism, and I seemed to be interested in Christianity. So, he dropped off... Continue Reading

