What Happened at the RPCNA Synod 2021?
The Reformed Presbyterian Church Synod (RPCNA) met on the campus of Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion, Ind., June14-17, 2021.
Many happy things were announced and decided upon as well. Professor Keith Evans’s position as biblical counseling professor at RPTS was renewed for seven more years. Students in various presbyteries were examined and made eligible to receive calls to Gospel ministry, including Mark Brown and Jerry Foltz. Denominational finances are very good and giving was... Continue Reading
A Response to the PCA “Moderators’ Letter”: May We Ask a Question?
A response to “A Firm Commitment,” a letter signed by some former PCA General Assembly moderators, claiming all is well in the PCA, except for some unduly sounding an alarm.
The challenges of homosexuality and Critical Race Theory pressing into our denomination are not matters of mere style, and mischaracterizing these concerns will not make them go away. Progressive PCA leaders may multiply letters and signatures denouncing the motives and attitude of concerned confessionalists, but Revoice and Critical Race Theory require an answer to the... Continue Reading
Report from the 190th (2021) Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America
The Reformed Presbyterian Church Synod (RPCNA) met on the campus of Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion, Ind., June14-17, 2021.
The Synod turned its attention to Communication 21-15, which requested that Synod clarify its position on the question of Creation. Recommendation 1: “This court hereby declares that belief in the literal parentage of Adam and Eve as our first parents is an essential point of the Christian system of doctrine.” A new recommendation 2 stated,... Continue Reading
A Letter From Former Moderators of PCA General Assemblies
“From our perspective, the PCA has maintained a firm commitment to historic evangelical and Reformed theology since its foundation.”
If you have heard some voices sounding an alarm that the PCA is on a steep “slippery slope” that leads to liberalism, we disagree. Any claim that we are becoming a denomination of liberals or have embraced an agenda that is out of accord with historic Presbyterian and Reformed Christianity fails to either understand our... Continue Reading
A Response to the “Open Letter” to the PCA
The Open Letter was obviously made public. I’m not bothered by the desire of the authors to do so, just that they don’t want others to have the same privilege.
Instead of expressing sympathy towards the legitimate concerns of thousands around the PCA, the Open Letter highlights a slanderous claim that “the PCA is ordaining practicing homosexuals,” a claim that I’ve never heard. Not even once. Rather than give attention to the real pressing issues facing the PCA, the Open Letter regrettably diverts the reader’s... Continue Reading
Honest Thoughts on the Open Letter
A response to the Open Letter: "Looking Forward—Together."
The heart of the issue is not whether homosexual practice is sinful; the key issue is whether homosexual attraction is itself a sin and if the heinousness of this sin is such that it disqualifies a man from holding ordained office. The letter’s failure to mention the widespread concern surrounding SSA anywhere in the body... Continue Reading
Looking Forward – Together
An open letter: A letter to our brothers and friends in the Presbyterian Church in America
Where may we differ with one another? We may differ in the expression of our Orthodoxy when it comes to worship, while keeping within the bounds of our polity and Scripture. We may differ in how our local cultural perspectives impact our day-to-day practices, in order to be faithful to Christ’s mission and to make... Continue Reading
The PCA Report on Human Sexuality Statement 7: Agreement and Review
Statement 7 touches upon the chief error in the Side B homosexual movement in the PCA, the idea that Christians can live with continuing sinful desire unabated.
By faith we should expect substantial progress in our holiness. Statement 7 does not countenance the defeatism of unbelief, whereas Revoice fails to encourage any expectation of change. The Side B view and appeal is “accept us just as we are.” Faith looks to the power of God to raise the dead and move mountains,... Continue Reading
A New Exception to the Westminster Standards?
The latest exception being taken in presbytery examines is to Westminster Shorter Catechism Q. 83, “Are all transgressions of the law equally heinous?”
To deny that an orientation can change is to deny the witness and the works of the Holy Spirit and to bring scandal upon the church. At some point, we need to come to a decision on whether we believe Side B theology and, therefore, self-styled “gay Christianity” to be a sin of a more... Continue Reading
Pre-PCA General Assembly Conference: “For Such a Time as This”
This pre-Assembly Conference will June 29, 2021, 10:00 – 11:55 a.m., at the St. Louis Holiday Inn Downtown-Convention Center, across the street from the PCA GA site.
This seminar will explore the nature of laws passed by local, state and federal bodies which appear antithetical to God’s moral law, and to provide guidance and options for the church’s biblical response. Join with us to discuss the spiritual, moral, and social issues of our day, and to find encouragement and resources on how... Continue Reading
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