Let the Little Children, Regardless of Genes, Come to Jesus
Is the technology to edit genes putting us on a path toward a genetic caste system?
As bioethics journalist Katelyn Walls Shelton observes, the technology at stake here is not limited to its impact on one child but extends to the heritable traits those children themselves pass on, with “the potential for these edits (or mistakes) to be passed on generationally. They’re not just editing one embryo’s genes; they’re editing the... Continue Reading
A Call for Clarity In The PCA Committee Report on Christian Nationalism
Two Questions for the PCA Committee on Christian Nationalism
I am not asking the committee to settle every debate. Church history shows debates will always continue. But I do ask they present the live debates honestly, acknowledging the strength of the contextual adjustment reading, and draw clearer distinctions in the ordo amoris section. Our presbyteries can exercise discernment in good faith subscription, but only... Continue Reading
The Importance of Preaching God’s Severity According to John Owen
God is not mocked.
There is a proneness in corrupted nature to despise the riches of the goodness, forbearance, and long-suffering of God, not knowing that the goodness of God leads them to repentance, and thereon after their hardness and impenitent heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath, as our apostle speaks (Rom. 2:4–5). Considering... Continue Reading
From Deadly Poison to Life-Giving Antidote
Just as venomous, toxic substances can cause fatal harm or bring real healing, our tongues can either be full of deadly poison or carry the antidote that the world needs.
James urges us to be quick to hear and slow to speak. Akin to slowness of speech is knowing when to stay silent. Sometimes the wisest person in the room is also the quietest. They don’t feel the need to spout their opinion or justify themselves constantly. Instead, they sit back, listen, and speak only... Continue Reading
Invasions, Justice and the Gospel
On Christian mission, and Islamism in the West.
Just as there were undiscerning Christians last century who refused to acknowledge the diabolical evil of the Nazis, so too we have many today who have not the slightest understanding of political Islam and their designs on the West. They think we should just welcome them in with open arms, regardless of their clearly stated... Continue Reading
Ohio City Requires Permit for Home Prayer; Resident Appeals to Supreme Court
Even without a Supreme Court decision yet, the case already illustrates how local land-use rules can be weaponized against minority religious practice.
Early believers gathered in homes to pray, teach, and break bread. When authorities later demanded registration or closure of such meetings, Christians appealed to divine law over human commands that contradicted it. Then Peter and the other apostles answered and said, We ought to obey God rather than men. (Acts 5:29, KJV) Daniel Grand,... Continue Reading
A Soul Beset: Anxiety and Depression in the Christian Life
The Christian life is not a life free from affliction, but it is a life in which affliction is never meaningless—nor is it by accident.
If anxiety is an unwelcome guest, should we seek only to expel it, or is there something to be learned even in its presence? The gospel speaks to our fears and our sorrows, not by offering a quick fix or a mere change of perspective, but by grounding us in the eternal realities of God’s... Continue Reading
Why Creation Matters, Part 3: The Flood
Creation is the basis for mercy. It matters.
We find that Creation and the Flood are intimately linked in the plan of God. In response to man’s sin, God undoes his miraculous creation—miraculously—and then returns it to its original state, despite the presence of sin. He shows his mercy more spectacularly than he did by creating humans to begin with. And he can... Continue Reading
Carried Through Cancer: The God Who Bears Up Daily
Bless Jesus for being your burden-bearing God.
Jesus was grieved, stricken, smitten, afflicted, pierced, crushed, chastised, and wounded—all to bear us up under our greatest burden: the soul-crushing weight of guilt and the penalty of the never-ending death our sin deserves (Isa. 53:4–5). On the cross, Jesus bore the heaviest burden, the sharpest thorn, and the most excruciating relational loss there is... Continue Reading
5 Ways Our Words Can Be Verbal Cyanide
We must resolve to discipline ourselves regarding the use of the tongue.
The tongue, so tiny, is immensely powerful. It is indeed mightier than generals and their armies. It can fuel our lives so that they become fiery furnaces, or it can cool our lives with the soothing wind of the Spirit. It can be forged by hell or it can be a tool of heaven. Offered... Continue Reading
When Eugenics Goes Viral
The baby boy’s short life and death were publicly documented for public consumption—all except for the gruesome details of his death.
It is frankly repulsive to see Ridgway claiming that he and his wife were “grieving the loss of their unborn child.” They did not lose him. They deliberately decided to have him killed at twenty-one weeks—when he could feel pain, suck his thumb, hear voices, and stretch—while recognizing that he was, in fact, an “unborn... Continue Reading
Grace Presbytery Deposes and Excommunicates Minister
It is anticipated that Willett may face charges in an additional county in the near future.
At its May 2026 presbytery meeting, since Willett could not appear before presbytery and did not submit a plea in writing, a plea of not guilty was recorded on his behalf, counsel was appointed, and June 9 was set as the date of his trial. The presbytery conducted the trial on Tuesday, found Willett guilty,... Continue Reading
A Response to PCA’s CN Study Committee
Not all cultures are equal; not all religions are compatible with the liberal conservative order.
Many new PCAers are Evangelicals, coming to Calvinist churches in the heyday of the racial reconciliationist moment of the early 21st century. And there are bad actors in the internet. But therein lies the problem. Not every conversation can be, or should be, about race and antisemitism. And those controversies should not govern questions of... Continue Reading
When You Feel Small or Insignificant
You and I ultimately serve the Triune God in our work and lives, and that makes all the difference.
The first thing to learn from this parable relating to feeling small and insignificant is, that you are neither small nor insignificant, because you are using what you have been given to honor the Lord. God sees it, and He sees you as important, valuable, significant. Therefore, in prison, the Apostle Paul was a success... Continue Reading
Marriage, Worship, and the Public Witness of the Church
BCO 59 is not a long chapter, but it gives us a sober and pastoral view of marriage.
Marriage should not be treated as a purely individual decision detached from family, church, and counsel. A young man and woman may be the ones getting married, but they are not the only ones affected. Families are joined. Households are shaped. Future children are impacted. Congregations are often involved. It may surprise some people... Continue Reading
Sex and a Just Society
Christian sexual ethics are not arbitrary or idiosyncratic edicts.
Faithful marriage is the best anti-poverty program, the best educational program, the best anti-crime program, and the best defense against loneliness and social anomie. Conversely, the sexual revolution has exacerbated these and other evils. There are the abortions, the diseases, the exploitation, the cruelty, the dehumanization, and more. Sexual sin destroys justice. This is... Continue Reading
Are We Forgiven for the Sins We Can’t Remember and Therefore, Don’t Confess?
God loves us too much to allow us to be entangled by sin.
Remember that 2 Corinthians 10:5 encourages us to “take every thought captive to obey Christ.” When doubts arise, we’re to challenge them with the truth of God’s Word. 1 John 1:9 reassures us: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”... Continue Reading
Wisdom Incarnate
Proverbs and the Sermon on the Mount.
What we behold shapes us. Our allegiance must therefore be pure and undivided. The call to holiness is ultimately the call to imitate God. Jesus commands, “You therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). Peter echoes this command: “Be holy, for I am holy” (1 Peter 1:15–16). We are to... Continue Reading
View Your Past Through the Lens of God’s Faithfulness
Friend, God has been faithful to you, even if you don’t know the full extent of that faithfulness.
When we look backward, we often do so wondering whether or not God has been faithful. When we feel that sense of loss, we begin to question whether or not He has actually faithfully provided. Or sustained. Or guarded. Or strengthened. But what if we changed our lenses? The type of lens makes... Continue Reading
The Reformation at 500: Luther’s Wasted Year?
For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory, while we do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen. For the things which are seen are temporary, but the things which are not seen are eternal.
In spite of all appearances during that year of waiting in the shadows, God was not finished with Luther, and Luther was not finished with the Reformation. To quote a popular line, things were not falling apart—they were merely falling into place. I love studying the Reformation at this season of the year.... Continue Reading
The Church’s True Purpose
Aligning with God’s plan in a broken world.
History is not random. The rise and fall of nations, the suffering and triumph of God’s people, even the opposition of God’s enemies—all of it is being woven into a tapestry that will display His glory. If you ask a group of Christians, “What is the church for?” you’ll probably hear a variety of... Continue Reading
How to Read the Bible When Your Heart Feels Cold
“My heart is again burning within me as the Spirit opened the Scriptures to me.”
When our hearts were once on fire with scriptural truth and now they are not, we must realize that nothing has changed in the Bible; heaven and earth will pass away before a single letter changes in Scripture (Matt. 5:18). No, it is we who, by our sin, have quenched the Spirit and the fire... Continue Reading
Your Beginning in God’s Purpose
Long ago, God wrote your name—and it wasn’t on a scrap piece of paper or on a list of to-dos.
Why is it that you, today, believe in Jesus? Is it because God just so happened to look down one day, notice your life spinning out of control, and enter in? Was there a point in which God was a newcomer to your life—reacting to the mess of some new situation? Or, in truth, had... Continue Reading
On Pleasant Places, Part 2: The Commitment
The consequences of living in a world broken by sin reach us as well, and we know the sorrows of sickness and death, of conflict and conflagration.
Family matters. Not because we’re all really cool, but because we are chosen and set apart and loved by the God who made all things and whose Son has purchased us with his own blood. That’s a good place to start. Part 1: The Call In the second stanza of Psalm 16, David... Continue Reading
The Servant’s Descent
How would you describe the depths of Jesus’ love?
John, in His Gospel account, lays out for us a divinely-inspired expression of the Son in similar fashion of overlapping, defining description. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God” (John 1:1–2). Try to develop a graphic that captures... Continue Reading
I Choose to Live for Jesus Christ First.–Maxim # 57
Not just the love I have for Him, but the love He has for me.
“For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died; and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised” (2 Corinthians 5:14, 15). This... Continue Reading
Eight Barriers to Unity
Each side is ready to think that the other should and will concede to them and will not risk division on so little a thing.
Christians, separated as they are from one another across a variety of denominations and splinter groups, nevertheless generally agree that more unity would be a good thing. While we value the spiritual oneness we have in Christ irrespective of different labels and groupings, Scripture is clear that this spiritual oneness should be reflected in visible... Continue Reading
Better Than a Utopia
In the midst of our pain, in the darkness, we don’t need freedom from that season or pain…instead we need God.
Wouldn’t it be nice if God at least let us Christians off the hook? I mean, we’re adopted into the family of God, so wouldn’t it be nice if, as His family members, He’d be like, “it’s ok, you don’t need to face the atrocities of this world”? I mean, if I had all the... Continue Reading
Prayer: Finding Peace
Why can you have peace? You can have peace because of the trustworthy God you are addressing!
In a crisis, even unbelievers quickly pray. Why is that? Even they seem to know God is their only hope. When, as a believer, my world seems to be collapsing—slowly or suddenly—prayer should be my first, fast, and reflexive action. Whether it’s during the immediate impact, as my personal “earth” is still quaking, or in... Continue Reading
Time Outside of Our Hands
There's a season for everything, even what we want to avoid.
Man has the limitation of time and death, but God experiences no such limits. (This makes the incarnation of Jesus that much more glorious and breathtaking.) What God does endures forever (Eccl 3:14). This is in stark contrast to the works of man which will pass away, be forgotten, or both. God has designed this... Continue Reading

