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Striving Side by Side

The Mind of Christ and the Mission of the Church

Written by Danson Ottawa | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

To strive side by side for the faith of the gospel is far more than a call to teamwork. It is a call to embody together the self-giving life of the crucified and exalted Lord.   Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and... Continue Reading

Sermons Are Not Ted Talks

Preaching Maxims, Numbers 1-50

Written by Chris Hutchinson | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Sermons are fundamentally a spiritual exercise, more art than science, more gift than craft. When centered on faith in the Son of God, who gave Himself for us, they are nothing less than an encounter with the living God.   Introduction1 I first wrote these maxims on the social media platform Formerly Known as Twitter... Continue Reading

Learning the Logic of Leviticus 8-10

Place & Priest

Written by Michael Mock | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

On the same day, the very day of their ordination, two of the priests, Nadab and Abihu, sinned grievously, offending God’s holiness. The Lord killed them. We learn sober lessons. God regulates worship. Worshipping the Lord is a matter of life and death. Destruction comes to all who do not worship God as he has... Continue Reading

The Darkest of Dark Ages

It seems clear that infanticide is the wave of the future in the West.

Written by Carl R. Trueman | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

A new Dark Age is upon us. The therapeutic culture has perverted our culture’s moral imagination.…We truly live in a world where good is called evil and evil is called good and where the murder of innocents is seen as a sign of moral progress. Indeed, the former Dark Ages perhaps don’t seem quite so... Continue Reading

Ordered Liberty After the Protestant Public Square

Reflections on Christian Nationalism, Protestant Institutionalism, and the Church’s Limits

Written by Rich Leino | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The church can teach that liberty must be ordered without claiming the state’s office. The church can declare that rulers are accountable to God without giving the magistrate the keys of the kingdom.   This article is not intended to replace, summarize, or correct the PCA’s ongoing study of Christian Nationalism. That work deserves careful... Continue Reading

The Ordinary and Enduring Gifts of the Spirit

All God-given gifts are to be used to serve the body of Christ, not to build ourselves up.

Written by William Barcley | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

God calls us to use the “ordinary” gifts that He has given us, cheerfully, for the good of others and for His own glory.   Scripture teaches that when Christ ascended, “he gave gifts” to all His people (Eph. 4:8). These gifts were given to strengthen and build up the church, the body of Christ.... Continue Reading

Assembly Declares Israel’s War in Gaza a Genocide

After hearing emotional testimony from a former GA moderator who recalled fleeing his home as a child, commissioners voted 454-15 to approve the measure.

Written by Eric Ledermann | Wednesday, July 15, 2026

As amended, RIW-04 states that Israel’s war in Gaza constitutes genocide and condemns what it calls Israel’s violation of the U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.   MILWAUKEE—The 227th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) voted last week 454-15 to adopt RIW-04, declaring that the government of Israel... Continue Reading

Christ and the Third Use of the Law

Correct and discipline your child, but never fail to remind her of the source of her obedience—of Christ and his gospel.

Written by John V. Fesko | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Apart from Christ, we have no ability to live the Christian life—to love others. We must constantly hear the indicatives—who we are in Christ and what he has done on our behalf. We must hear of the Spirit’s work in our hearts and lay hold of the life-giving words of the gospel in order to... Continue Reading

Three Gauges Every Pastor Should Watch

Burnout can be an overused word, so we should use it carefully and not confuse it with ordinary fatigue.

Written by Darryl Dash | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Many pastors can carry seasons of intense labor without burning out, as long as there’s meaning, support, recovery, and a shared load. Burnout tends to take root when the work becomes unrelenting, when our hearts begin to grow cold, and when we start to believe that our work doesn’t make a difference. So pay attention.... Continue Reading

Why Jesus’ Incarnation Stands Alone Among All Faiths

The incarnation accomplishes one saving purpose: God restores sinners to himself, brings them into his holy family, and is not ashamed to call them brothers and sisters.

Written by Peter Daniel Joseph | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Salvation is not merely forgiveness. The child born to Mary is also Immanuel (Matt 1:23). Sin separated humanity from God’s presence; to restore God’s presence, sin first had to be dealt with. The incarnation begins the saving work that removes the barrier between God and humanity. John says the Word became flesh and “made his... Continue Reading

Shutting Down Christian Speech

A counseling bill in the United Kingdom shows that British Christians cannot escape the culture war.

Written by Bethel McGrew | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Principled Christians here in the United States are better protected for now, as we saw in the hopeful precedent set by SCOTUS’s ruling in favor of therapist Kaley Chiles. In Colorado, an attempted ban on so-called “conversion practices” was struck down as an infringement on Chiles’ freedom of speech. Like Pilkington, Chiles used talk therapy... Continue Reading

The Jews, the Church, and Two Ditches to Avoid

What do Gentile Christians actually owe the Jewish people?

Written by Michael Clary | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Romans 11 is not about foreign policy, it simply exhorts Gentile Christians to not be arrogant towards the Jews. It says maintain humility about your position as a wild olive shoot grafted into a tree you did not plant. None of that translates into a requirement to support any particular nation’s foreign policy. The only... Continue Reading

Giving Gifts to Men: Christ’s Provision for His Church

Gifts should be more about the well-being of the whole church than the preoccupations of its individual members.

Written by Ryan M. McGraw | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Like many lights illuminating a large room, the triune God shines more brilliantly through Christians gathered together than apart. Gifted grace fosters “humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love” and being “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (4:2). Graces are others-centered, which means that... Continue Reading

Carl Trueman’s Royal Elegy: A Confessional Reformed Critique

Over-reliance upon description over prescription reduces scholarship to a mere diagnosis of the disease rather than a theological cure for a godless society.

Written by Ron DiGiacomo | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Even within a deeply pluralized, multi-faith setting, historic Reformed theology does not default to the compromise King Charles has chosen. The civil ruler still bears an office of divinely ordained authority and is morally restricted from using that authority to equate the Christian faith with false religions or to relativize absolute truth claims. The transition... Continue Reading

Peter’s Deliverance and Herod’s Judgment Echo the First Passover

Not only was Herod not a god, but he was also not even the sovereign ruler of his own kingdom. God in his sovereignty rules all things, including persecution and deliverance from persecution.

Written by Iain M. Duguid | Tuesday, July 14, 2026

On the appointed day, Herod appeared before the people of Tyre and Sidon in all his royal splendor and delivered an eloquent speech (Acts 12:21). The Jewish historian Josephus noted that he wore a robe of silver, designed to sparkle in the sun.2 Impressed by this display, the people of Tyre and Sidon credited him... Continue Reading

Legacy Tree

Tucked away in a draw on our Montana property stands a Douglas fir that a forester estimated to be more than six hundred years old.

Written by Peter Rosenberger | Monday, July 13, 2026

Jesus told us to consider the lilies of the field and the birds of the air. He pointed to ordinary things that people passed every day and used them to reveal extraordinary truths about His Father’s care. Standing beneath this old fir, I’ve begun to wonder whether that invitation extends farther than flowers and sparrows.... Continue Reading

Lessons About Marriage from the Dance Floor

During my sabbatical my wife and I took ballroom dance lessons. I never expected they would become one of the clearest illustrations of God's beautiful design for marriage.

Written by Sean Whitenack | Monday, July 13, 2026

No one watching an accomplished couple would conclude that the dancers are interchangeable. Their movements are different precisely because they are dancing together. Their differences do not diminish the dance; they create it. Scripture presents marriage in much the same way. Men and women possess equal dignity because both bear God’s image (Genesis 1:27), yet... Continue Reading

What About the Awkward Psalms?

Plead for the revival of the unjust.

Written by Robert Ventura | Monday, July 13, 2026

We should desire all people to ‘serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling’ lest the Son’s wrath be kindled against them (Psa. 2:11, 12). Therefore, it is right to apply such prayers to the enemies of the church today. Jesus promises that the gates of hell shall not prevail against her (Matt. 16:18).... Continue Reading

Many Members, One Body: Gifts and Love in the Church

Whatever the gift might be—teaching, administration, and so on—all must be exercised to grow the body in mutual love.

Written by Jonathan Landry Cruse | Monday, July 13, 2026

The diversity of body parts is not detrimental to the body as a whole—it’s essential to it. What makes a body a body is the unity of the diversity. The same is true in the church: What makes it the church is the part you play. Your feeling like you have a part to play... Continue Reading

2. Why Reformed Pastors May Be More Subject to Depression than Others

Our job is to keep fighting while engaged in the long retreat of life.

Written by Chris Hutchinson | Monday, July 13, 2026

We are all in a form of retreat while we are in these earthly frames. Our bodies and minds, and sometimes our resolve, weakens. In Scripture, we see godly men like Moses or David or Peter fall into sin late in life. We should not think that our doctrine of progressive sanctification makes us immune... Continue Reading

Reputation vs Reality: The Church in Sardis

Façades won’t furnish faith.

Written by Michael Mock | Monday, July 13, 2026

So many saints in name only hear the Word of Christ through the Spirit of Christ Sunday after Sunday. The way forward is back: Return to those very words, and believe! There’s power in the words. There’s life, real life, not reputation-only life, in those words. By the grace of the Spirit, we have these... Continue Reading

Book Review: A Sight Never to be Forgotten: Eyewitness Accounts from Union Chaplains at Gettysburg

Hale’s book offers an impressive array of primary resources. No student of the battle or chaplains today can reasonably do without it.

Written by Jonathan W. Peters | Monday, July 13, 2026

Hale makes a valid case that “chaplains perceived and interpreted” the battle of Gettysburg differently from other participants. Unlike the combatants, “whose focus was limited to killing the enemy directly in their front,” chaplains sometimes stood just behind the battle lines of their regiments, granting them “a wide-angle view.” Others stationed further to the rear... Continue Reading

Something Rotten in the Church?

Reflections on a revealing response.

Written by David Robertson | Monday, July 13, 2026

In my church there are people who think that there should be women elders. There are also people who are not Presbyterian and haven’t a clue what an elder is. I am happy to care for and pastor those who disagree with my view on this – it is not a first order issue. As... Continue Reading

God Believes In Rest. Do You?

Rest to establish in your own mind and others’, that you are not infinite, but finite, and that God made you for rest in just the same way he made you for work.

Written by Tim Challies | Sunday, July 12, 2026

Do we really need to fill our rest full of “holy” activities for it to be meaningful to the Lord? Is a good holiday the one that leaves us practically burnt out after serving the Lord so hard? Is a good Sunday necessarily the most active Sunday? I see no evidence for this in the... Continue Reading

Why Creation Matters, Part 6: Isaiah

If your God has made heaven and earth—and your own Scripture starts with that foundational fact—then why are you afraid of Babylon, your oppressor?

Written by Dan Olinger | Sunday, July 12, 2026

The God who created the cosmos will certainly rule it wisely and well and will accomplish his own purposes throughout its existence.  Isaiah 44.23-45.18 This passage, which lies between the first two Servant Songs, focuses on God’s deliverance of Judah from captivity in Babylon and their consequent return to the land. The God who created... Continue Reading

What Does It Mean to “Put Off the Old Self” and “Put On the New Self”?

Ephesians 4:20-24.

Written by Beautiful Christian Life Staff | Sunday, July 12, 2026

Our justification does not come some day in the undetermined future, based on our own works. Every true believer is declared righteous in Christ and has both legal and relational standing as God’s children. All believers are coheirs with Christ (Rom. 8:17). Christians not only have the benefit of being justified in Christ, but they... Continue Reading

Succeeding at Things that Don’t Matter

Think about what is occupying your time and energy. Are there things that you might be a success in that don’t matter?

Written by Pete Hurst | Sunday, July 12, 2026

We have to be careful that what doesn’t matter to us might not be the same for someone else. The best path to follow is to focus on ourselves instead of being preoccupied with how someone else is spending their time and energy.     “I’m not afraid of failure, I’m afraid of succeeding at... Continue Reading

The DNA of a Faithful Church

The early church wasn’t defined by buildings, but by transformed people united in Christ, devoted to truth, and marked by love. What would it look like for our churches to recover that vision?

Written by Philip Hunt | Sunday, July 12, 2026

Wherever such people gather in Christ’s name, there is the church. It might be a grand cathedral, a converted warehouse, a school hall, or a living room. The location is incidental. The essence lies in the people themselves: those called out of darkness into God’s marvelous light.     If you ask a group of... Continue Reading

Loving the Church in Her Brokenness

To see and experience the brokenness of the church is also to see and experience the redeeming work of Christ as He makes all things new.

Written by Colton Taylor | Sunday, July 12, 2026

The entirety of Scripture tells the story of God redeeming His people. From Adam and Eve in Genesis 3 to the covenant promises given to Abraham, to Moses leading the people in the wilderness, to Joshua leading them into the promised land, to a nation under the Davidic kingship, and finally to the New Testament... Continue Reading

The Sins of the Father

Isaac’s inheritance of blessing and failure (Gen. 26:1–35).

Written by Reformed Arsenal Staff | Sunday, July 12, 2026

How does God respond to Isaac’s cowardly, faithless lie? Breathtakingly, God responds with overwhelming, unmerited grace. In a year of severe famine, Isaac plants crops and reaps “a hundredfold.” A hundredfold return is a miraculous, staggering yield. God blesses Isaac so immensely that he becomes a massive economic threat to the Philistines, sparking deep envy.... Continue Reading

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