Why Critics Are Wrong to Scold Evangelicals for Historical Rootlessness
A new book demonstrates the movement has been “a perennial and recurring feature of Christian history.”
Does modern evangelicalism suffer from a lack of tradition and historical awareness? Not so fast, says Kenneth Stewart, a theologian teaching at Covenant College. His book, In Search of Ancient Roots: The Christian Past and the Evangelical Identity Crisis, tells a different story than we’re accustomed to hearing. About 20 years ago, theologian D. H.... Continue Reading
10 Marks of a Grace-Alone Church
Grace is a vital doctrine, not simply for the church’s theological confession but also for the church’s theological practice.
To be able to point Christians to a sovereign God who has revealed himself as gracious in Christ is perhaps the single most important thing that a pastor can do. When the problems of this fallen world close in on us, as they inevitably will, there can be a tendency to see our sin or... Continue Reading
A Pastoral Approach to the Transgender Debate
The recent gender and sexuality sea change that has played out before our eyes is head-spinning
“What’s the church to do? Do we take up arms to fight a culture war, even though we have rarely waged such wars in a faithful or loving way? How do we proclaim the gospel of Christ while simultaneously affirming the lordship of Christ over human design and the nature of truth?” The recent... Continue Reading
An Introduction to the Life of Samuel Davies
Samuel Davies was the first Presbyterian minister east of the Shenandoah and Appalachian Mountains to be lawfully licensed in Virginia.
…Third, Davies was one of the first American ministers to actively labor among the African slaves, and received many of them into membership in his Hanover congregation. Fourth, he started a mission to the Overhill Cherokees along the western borders of North Carolina and South Carolina. Fifth, his sermons were among the most popular in... Continue Reading
How America Lost Its Mind (Book Review)
Kurt Anderson’s Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire is one of the bestselling books of the year
When did America become uncoupled from reality? In Anderson’s account, we were already losing our grip when our nation was founded. Although school teachers tell the story of our founding with almost exclusive reference to the Pilgrims, America’s real founding fathers were the Puritans, members of a “nutty religious cult” who believed in “fantasies” such... Continue Reading
Beyond Sunny Stories of How Good we Are
Which books will help you go deeper than the specific flashpoint of “indulgences” that pushed Martin Luther to publish his 95 Theses?
One of my three favorites among new biographies is Scott Hendrix’s Martin Luther: Visionary Reformer (Yale, 2015), which shows how “separating religion from moralism was Luther’s revolutionary innovation.” Moralistic religion meant designating holy ground, building temples as places to make sacrifices, creating ceremonies, and going through procedures that, when checked off, would guarantee eternal rewards. But Luther... Continue Reading
Closer Than a Sister
Christina Fox, in her newest book, Closer Than a Sister: How Union with Christ helps Friendships to Flourish, discusses the importance of our friendships with other believers.
Christina explains that this is what sisterhood is all about. It’s about meeting physical needs. It’s about mourning together and rejoicing together. It’s about exhorting and encouraging each other, spurring each other on in the race. And it’s about not pretending we have it all together: How do we pretend? We put on our very best... Continue Reading
The “Broken” Evangelical Buzzword (Wells)
What’s the big deal? Why can’t we just talk about being broken and bruised instead of sinful and wretched before God?
“This psychologizing of sin and salvation has an immediacy about it that is appealing in this troubled age, this age of broken beliefs and broken lives. The cost, however, is that it so subverts the process of moral understanding that sin loses its sinfulness, at least before God. And whereas in classical spirituality it was... Continue Reading
Apostasy in Hebrews 6:4-6 (Owen)
The perseverance of the saints is a clear – and comforting! – teaching of Scripture. So what is Hebrews 6:4-6 teaching?
“That the people here intended (in Heb. 6:4-6) are not true and sincere believers, in the strict and proper sense of that name, at least they are not described here as such; so that from this nothing can be concluded concerning them that are so, as to the possibility of their total and final apostasy.... Continue Reading
A Review: “Killing England”
A review of Bill O’Reilly’s “Killing England.”
In a post-Christian America there is a movement to rid our nation of all vestiges of its Christian past. Highlighting the sins of former Christian heroes enables them to do this. Since early America was greatly influenced by the Christian Faith, many modern historians in our educational system (and entertainment industry) are beginning to target... Continue Reading
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