Our Daily Descent
If self-knowledge begins with God, then apart from God any view of ourselves is distorted.
The confession of sin culminates in the acknowledgment of our condition. Due to our rebellion from God our Creator there is no health in us… we are miserable offenders. Brought lower still to our fallen, creaturely, and God-dependent state, the remedy of the gospel as declared in Christ Jesus is set forth! The minister then declares that through faith... Continue Reading
Remembering the Reformation
The church must not forget the lessons learned during the Reformation. We cannot forget what happens when the gospel is obscured and distorted.
There are hundreds of books on the Reformation, but if one coming to the subject for the first time were looking for the best place to start, he would be hard pressed to find a better introduction than Stephen J. Nichols’ The Reformation (Crossway, 2007). For those who find history difficult, Nichols’ style of writing... Continue Reading
The Limits of Civil Obedience
Schaeffer argues that during the first eighty years of the twentieth century a more rapid departure from that worldview subjected every institution to substantial alteration—whether family, school, church, or government.
Christians, who understand what God requires, obey or disobey on principles, not whims or wishes. Schaeffer observes that wherever the Reformation flourished, two essential and inseparable aspects from the Christian worldview governed citizens: (1) because God ordains governments, he establishes proper order, including officials to whom honor is due (Romans 13:7); and (2) the obligation... Continue Reading
5 Recommended Resources on the Westminster Confession of Faith
One of the Most Well-Written and Enduring Confessions of the Reformed Tradition
Confessing the Faith: A Reader’s Guide to the Westminster Confession of Faith by Chad Van Dixhoorn. Historical and practical in its focus, this book provides a guide to the confession, considers its original proof-texts, and seeks to deepen the reader’s understanding of the Westminster Confession. Both advanced and general audiences can benefit from this book and... Continue Reading
How Hitler and a Boring Sermon Awakened C.S. Lewis’s Demons
And just like that, Screwtape was born.
If you’ve never read the Screwtape Letters before, I’d encourage you to grab a copy. The book consists of 31 letters from a senior demon Screwtape to his nephew, a junior demon, named Wormwood. This is arguably Lewis’s most influential work. You can read it in a month just doing one letter a day. They... Continue Reading
5 Bad Substitutes for Discipline
Parenting Against the Tide, Ann Benton
Bribery takes behavior out of the moral framework and makes obedience to you optional. Can that be right? What if the child turns down your proffered sweets or sticker and decides being disobedient is more fun? Do you enter into negotiations and up the ante? You are teaching the children that the only reason to... Continue Reading
Chapter 3: The Destruction of Faith and Freedom
How much moral diversity can a society withstand before it collapses beneath the weight of relativism and moral subjectivism?
We live in an age whose moral barbarisms eclipse what Schaeffer saw in his own day. Were he alive today, Schaeffer would not be shocked in the least. Instead, watching the wreckage of the world, he might say with tears, “You should have listened to me” (cf. Acts 27:21). Contemporary society is living proof of Schaeffer’s... Continue Reading
Lay Elders, An Important Book for You, As Defenders of Truth
A brief review of “Dangerous Affirmation: The Threat of “Gay Christianity” by M.D. Perkins.
The sources to which “gay Christians” constantly appeal—secular psychology, sociological data, identity theory, and the personal experiences of people who identify as sexual minorities—are not sufficient to guide us into all truth…If the Bible is God’s holy, inerrant, and clear revelation, then it is the foundation of all that we should believe and do—regardless of... Continue Reading
Ruth Haley Barton & Contemplative Corruption – Part 1
Book Review: Contemplative practices are experience-based and experience-driven. They do not rest on clear Scriptural teaching, but in Contemplative practices, they are given equal weight with the Scriptures.
Although the Holy Spirit indwells believers in Christ, nothing in God’s word teaches that within is a Divine Center or a Speaking Voice. The Holy Spirit is not comingled with the believer’s nature but is distinct from it. God’s voice is found in the Bible, a precious source of truth for all who seek guidance from it. Barton’s view... Continue Reading
Why Does the Sovereignty of God Matter?
A.W. Pink, The Sovereignty Of God
“Sovereignty characterizes the whole Being of God. He is sovereign in all His attributes. He is sovereign in the exercise of His power. His power is exercised as He wills, when He wills, where He wills. This fact is evidenced on every page of Scripture. For a long season that power appears to be dormant,... Continue Reading
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