FIGHT NIGHT: FAITH ALONE VS. ROME
If you ever want to start a spiritual boxing match, just stand in a room full of Council of Trent...
Read Moreby Jay Harrod | Apr 30, 2025 | Theology | 0 |
If you ever want to start a spiritual boxing match, just stand in a room full of Council of Trent...
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Apr 12, 2022 | Theology | 0 |
Nate Pickowicz’s new biography, R.C. Sproul: Defender of the Reformed Faith from H&E Publishing is an accessible and concise look at one of the most influential teachers God ever gifted to the church.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Feb 28, 2022 | Theology | 0 |
Reformed Ethics – Vol. 2 is another treasure trove of Herman Bavinck’s thinking on mankind’s duty before God, himself, and his neighbor.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Jan 31, 2022 | Theology | 0 |
Cory Brock’s vital new book, Orthodox Yet Modern is a helpful corrective to the popular but inaccurate “Two Bavincks” theory.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Jan 6, 2022 | Theology | 2 |
Louis Berkhof’s Systematic Theology – Expanded Edition is a must-have for any serious student of theology. Banner of Truth has now given us a handy single volume of Berkhof’s most significant works.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Dec 31, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
With this article, we are continuing our recurring series of reviews looking at notable commentaries on Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. Here we are looking at Magee and Arthurs contribution to Kregel’s Kerux Commentaries series and Richard D. Phillips’s entry in the Mentor Expository Commentary series.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Nov 6, 2021 | Theology | 1 |
This important commentary on Ephesians comes to us from Andrew T. Walker as part of Zondervan’s Word Biblical Commentary series. Unfortunately, while Lincoln may be an accomplished scholar, his denial that the Apostle Paul actually wrote Ephesians affects the usefulness of this book for believing students of the Bible.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Oct 5, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
A Little Book on the Christian Life I was surprised to find out how utterly readable John Calvin...
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Aug 24, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
A Presbyterian minister named Alfred H. Ackley wrote hundreds of hymns. One of the most well-known...
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Aug 18, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
With this article, I am introducing what will be a recurring series of reviews looking at notable commentaries on Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. I have been blessed to teach from Ephesians and hope these reviews will help readers to consider some of the many resources out there.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Aug 12, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
Whether they hold to the doctrine of the Christian Sabbath or not, Christians should universally believe in the significance and importance of attending church. Yet folks skip miss church for all sorts of reasons—and most of them are bad reasons. One of the worst reasons Christians miss weekly worship is due to a vacation or travel schedule.
I believe that Christians should make every effort to schedule their lives around the Lord’s Day. Worshipping Christ in communion with the saints should be the focal point of your week…and everything else should fit in around that. If you follow that principle, you will never find yourself traveling all day Sunday and missing church or lounging on the beach when you should be gathering corporately. A mind set on being ready to meet with God on Sunday with the saints will take the necessary steps on Saturday to not be too tired for church, for example.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Aug 4, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
Donald Macleod’s beautiful new book, Therefore the Truth I Speak is an engaging look at Scottish theology that mines the past and brings it into the present.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Jul 16, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
The T&T Clark Handbook on Analytic Theology is a landmark resource from a team of authors hoping to bridge the gap between philosophy and theology.
Read Moreby Chuck Ivey | Jun 30, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
Geerhardus Vos’s Reformed Dogmatics is a must-have for aspiring theologians. The new Lexham Press single-volume edition of this important work is a great option for anyone who has been reluctant to pay for the previous five-volume set.
Read Moreby Allen Nelson IV | May 31, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
This is Part 2 in a two-part series on the Covenant of Works in Genesis 2. See Part 1 here....
Read Moreby Allen Nelson IV | May 24, 2021 | Theology | 1 |
In the Garden of Eden, there lived a king named Adam. God gave Adam, the first man, a mission to...
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Apr 22, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
The Problem I saw a heartbreaking post in a Facebook group. It went like this: Do any of you worry...
Read Moreby Allen Nelson IV | Mar 10, 2021 | Theology | 0 |
In this post, we’ll look at a sermon outline from the book of Ruth and focus on Elimelech’s...
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Sep 19, 2020 | Evangelism, Missions, Preaching, pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
Do you know that feeling when you start to tell someone about the Lord and you realize they do not already know Him? Do you get a pit in your stomach sometimes—a warning not to go there? Our natural response to difficulty is sometimes “flight.” Telling your neighbor that God will not only judge him or her but that God is right to do so can be frightening! It is no wonder we fail so many times in our evangelism—it is truly counter to our flesh’s desires for comfort!
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Mar 21, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
Jesus, the lamb of God, became sin for His people that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. Jesus was the lamb who never strayed from the pasture, yet he took on the penalty deserved by foolish and rebellious sheep. Jesus is the lost sheep when he is suffering the penalty for our sins. Jesus is the one who cries to God to be sought after in this state. And Jesus is the one who never forgot God’s commands.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Mar 3, 2020 | Theology | 0 |
Pastor Meadows created something I really needed in this explanation of the Regulative Principle of Worship: clarity, conciseness, and a direct explanation of the doctrine.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Feb 8, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
Pray Like Jesus Psalms 119:169 Taw Let my cry come before you, O Yahweh; give me understanding...
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Feb 1, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
It has been said that there are two religions in the world: the religion of grace and the religion of works. A distinguishing characteristic of the religion of works is that somehow the good deeds a man does are what pleases his deity. This is true whether that religion sees man as inherently good or as innately sinful. Since this is an affront to the gospel of grace, our Scriptures go to great lengths to destroy any hope men can have to save themselves by proclaiming the gospel of grace (Romans 3:24,25; Ephesians 2:8, 9). But wicked men will always twist good religion to their own ends and many a man has proclaimed the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ apart from works as a license to sin.
One of the ways God helps us to walk in his ways while we strive to imitate Christ is by granting us awareness of His immanence. Nothing can be hidden from the anthropomorphic eyes of God. For the heathen, this truth is blatantly denied as they fancy themselves into thinking they will escape judgment. It’s not always because men think they are good that they shall escape judgment, but sometimes it is that they think no one knows of their crimes. The child of God whose heart has been quickened earnestly desires obedience to God’s precepts and adherence to God’s testimonies, yet he or she still finds it difficult to obey. The spirit and flesh are opposed to each other and the battle rages, and sometimes the flesh wins.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Jan 25, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
Christianity is thought of by many as the “religion of niceness.” Whoever came up with that idea knows very little of the scripture. Yes, Christians are called to be kind and should be known by their kindness and meekness. But too often we mistake kindness for fake-virtues like “never disagreeing with anyone,” and “never hating anything or anyone.” But as David speaks here, so does the Christ, “I hate and abhor falsehood.” Jesus Christ is the Truth and falsehood is a lie. Thus it is fitting that we should hate the opposite (falsehood) of that which we love (Christ). God chooses more than one word here to denote His holy hatred for lying. God personally hates lying and morally detests it.
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Jan 18, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
We vomit spoiled food almost instantaneously, not because we think about it and decide we should expel it, but because our bodies are naturally designed to protect us. We have a *”gag reflex” for a reason, and it prevents things from getting deep inside us before we have time to realize all the effects. Similarly, our Christian conscience and convictions, bathed in the Word and Law of God, are capable of causing a natural aversion to sin and evil before we’ve even had time to consider it. We are disgusted by the ideas of lying, stealing, vandalism, gossip, slander, sexual immorality, rape, orgies, homosexual acts and desires, drunkness, hypocrisy, envy, sorcery, and faithlessness. A Christian who is growing in holiness and separation from worldly lusts will find themselves more quickly disgusted when they encounter rampant wickedness and filth as they walk their path in this world (James 1:21).
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Jan 11, 2020 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
Psalm 119 is the longest chapter in the entire Bible. It’s longer than several entire books....
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Dec 28, 2019 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
It is easy to be anxious in this world. We are surrounded by difficulty even when we are not being chased down by evildoers. A Christian’s comfort must begin with God. And the only way we can find comfort is with a God who is near to us. Other religions brag of completely transcendent gods. Some religions have gods who are so much like us that it’s impossible to discern what makes them gods in the first place. But our God, the God of Heaven and Earth, is near to us. He is omnipresent so we always have access to Him through Jesus Christ who shed his blood for us then rose again and ascended into Heaven. There is no place we can go to avoid His presence (as if we’d want to!).
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Dec 21, 2019 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 2 |
The promise we have received is no different, but we have received more revelation. We meditate on the aspects of that promise which are already fulfilled: that Jesus Christ has come into the world. He was born of the virgin, conceived without the stain of sin by the Holy Spirit, and was perfectly righteous before the Father in every respect, although He was tempted by Satan (Hebrew 4:15). He was delivered to death and suffered the wrath of almighty God for sinners, (Isaiah 53:11), was buried, and on the third day rose from the grave (1 Corinthians 15:3,4). THIS is what we meditate upon, and all its implications: that we are wretched sinners, that Christ is a kind and gracious and all-sufficient savior, and that only by grace through faith can salvation be accomplished (among others)!
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Dec 18, 2019 | Theology | 0 |
The Apostle Paul told the Phillippians that his prayer for them was that their love would abound...
Read Moreby Michael Coughlin | Dec 7, 2019 | pSaturday Psalms, Theology | 0 |
First, we note the extent and duration of God’s righteousness. It is righteous forever. There is no other being of whom that can be said. God is eternal and unchanging. Thus, His righteousness is forever righteous. What a comfort to know that our God will not change and will forever be righteous. Secondly, we note the quality of God’s righteousness. His righteousness is righteous. While this seems obvious, it bears remarking that God describes our righteousness in very different terms. Isaiah 64:6 reminds us that “all our righteous deeds are like a polluted garment. We all fade like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away.” God’s righteousness is contrasted with ours in that His righteousness is eternal and unblemished righteousness. There is no stain on God’s righteousness and it isn’t pushed about by winds of change. Praise Him!
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