Uncategorized
-
Two Gospel Heresies
Salvation by works is heresy. Salvation without works is heresy. Both are damnable. In the history of the Church the battle for the gospel has often centered on two extremes that eviscerate it. They are equally damning. Moralism First, there is the heresy of moralism. This is the horridly humanistic idea that man can somehow… Continue reading
-
Christianity as Empire
And in the days of these kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed; and the kingdom shall not be left to other people; it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever. Daniel 2:44 If evangelical Christians are to have an… Continue reading
-
Man Without a Movement
Dedicated to John M. Frame, who for four decades has successfully resisted the lure of movements What is a movement? As I am defining it here, a movement is an informal association of individuals united by adherence to a particular ideology (a highly structured, generally comprehensive view of reality) dominated by one or more influential… Continue reading
-
A Blogsphere Division of Labor
My web articles dealing with distinctively cultural issues will continue to appear at the CCL site. The more theologically oriented posts will be here. Continue reading
-
The Goodness and Severity of God in the New Testament
Question: Hi Andrew, Once again, a superb sermon chock full of practical application. Thank you for bringing us the Word so faithfully each and every week. … [I]n light of today’s sermon (and amazingly the opening Psalm we read about the Israelites in the wilderness), I have a question. It pertains to God’s dealings with… Continue reading
-
Boil the Frog Slowly
Most of us have heard the morality tale of the frog that leapt from the boiling pot when tossed in but allowed himself to be placed in a pot of cool water over a stove and boiled slowly to death. Myth or not, it describes the pernicious deceptiveness of apostasy. The unwary, foolish young man… Continue reading
-
Liberals Are Smarter Than Conservatives
It’s remarkable that conservatives don’t understand how Genesis (creation) and John 3:16 (redemption) hang and fall together, because liberals understand it all too well. In one of the most quoted liberal works of the first part of the 20th century, Harvard Professor of Church History Kirsopp Lake writes: [T]he Fundamentalists are perfectly right in thinking… Continue reading
-
The Gauntlet Tossed to “The Grace Movement”
It is perhaps surprising that an essay published by group with such a fully deserved reputation for vilifying other Christians as the Trinity Foundation should be so theologically on target, not to mention uncharacteristically judicious and charitable as Timothy F. Kauffman’s “Sanctification, Half Full: The Myopic Hermeneutic of the ‘Grace Movement.’” Can a leopard change his… Continue reading
-
Are We Really Bible-Believers? Synchronic versus Diachronic Theology
In contemplating Christian theology, it’s vital to distinguish synchronic from diachronic theology. The Bible is not chiefly about theology (as in “systematic theology”), but about God’s revelation in history, centered in the Person of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. However, the Bible does set forth theology (John’s account of Jesus’ teachings, Paul’s interpretation of… Continue reading
-
John R. W. Stott on Temperamental Versus Theological Conservatism
We are conservative evangelicals. But let us make sure our conservatism is a theological conservatism and not a temperamental one…. We are conserving, preserving the unique revelation of God in Christ and in Scripture. But let us be clear that we are not conservative temperamentally, or in our prejudices, or in our lifestyles, or in… Continue reading
-
The False Teaching of “Transitioning” into Discipleship
Not all false teachings in the church are properly classed as theological heresies, such that they would violate a specific doctrinal statement or confession of faith. Some of the most pernicious false teachings, ordinarily more implied than explicated, can pass muster at the bar of almost any traditional confession of faith — and in fact… Continue reading
-
Spontaneous Obedience
In his otherwise helpful essay defending the traditionally Reformed view of justification, Michael Horton writes, “The gospel of free justification gives rise to a spontaneous embrace of the very law that once condemned it” (105). Horton is explicitly countering the argument that if one situates justification at the center of Pauline soteriology, he is hard… Continue reading

