Thursday, November 13, 2014
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Conscience a Foundational Point of the Reformation |
Saturday, November 01, 2014
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Mars Hill Closing is what we ought to expect |
So Mars Hill is closing. Closing all of its multi-site campuses. The move is described as "unexpected". But really this is the single thing that we ought to expect. This is what churches built upon personalities do.
Remember Vision Forum? Doug Phillips turns out to be . . . well, unqualified biblically. What did Vision Forum do? Exactly the same thing as Mars Hill. Suspension and then close the doors.
Remember what happened when R.C. Sproul Jr., got defrocked for tax fraud and breaking his vows? The church just pulled out of the denomination, reinstated the man, and then got another group/denomination to make his work official again.
In fact, I bet you can count on this happening more and more.
Why?
Because for these people no message is bigger than the man. The man is the message. And sadly that man is not Jesus Christ. It really comes back down to who is the head of the church. Is it Jesus or is it just the guy up front doing the preaching. If it is Jesus, then he sets the rules. And if the guy up front crosses the line that Jesus sets and becomes no longer qualified for ministry, then he is removed, and someone else proclaims the same message: the gospel of Jesus. But if the man up front is bigger than the message, if the guy preaching is head of the church, then when something happens to him, then it is time to close up shop.
Sadly this is not just the problem of the people up front. Many in the pew have the same misguided idea. They attend church not because of the faithful message of Jesus Christ, but because they like the guy up front. Take a look at the history of Mega Churches. The Crystal Cathedral was going strong until the man up front retired, now it is gone because the people quit coming. The were followers of the man up front. Bill Hybels was once a guru, he steps out of the pulpit to focus on other things, and now his church is in free fall. People attended because of the man up front.
It is not unexpected that man centered things fold when the man leaves. Sadly this is the new normal for the church.
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
[+/-] |
Making the Same Mistake Courtship Makes |
Monday, August 11, 2014
[+/-] |
Mark Driscoll and New Calvinism |
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
[+/-] |
Seeking a Better Country - book review |
Monday, July 07, 2014
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Time to reconsider the Seminary |
Friday, June 27, 2014
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Frozen as a picture of what is wrong with our culture |
Saturday, June 14, 2014
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Three Forms vs. WCF Sabbath - Final Quote |
As a nice summary of the difference between the Continental View and the Westminster view, I found a good quote from Dr. Lewis Mayer. Since some have also thought the difference went away in the 16th century as the view evolved, Mayer should serve as good proof that is not true. Mayer was born late 18th century and did most of his work in the early 19th century. He was a professor at Mercersburg Theological Seminary and a member of the German Reformed church, the early RCUS.
"The German Reformed Church, like the Lutheran, considers the Lord's Day a sacred season, set apart for the performance of the ordinary public worship of God, and deriving all its sacredness from the service to which it is appointed; the Presbyterian regards the day as intrinsically holy. Presbyterians consider it the sabbath linked to the Fourth commandment, but modified by our Lord as to the day and the penalty of its violation and derive its sanctity from the fact that the seventh day is the day of God's resting from all His work." -pg.20-21 the History of the German Reformed Church
In fairness Mayer has a list of ways the German Church is different than the Presbyterians and this is but one. I agree with most of them, but one of them does show the beginnings of Mercersburg Theology. But it is a late German Reformed theologian writing about why it is wrong to consider Reformed Continental Theology the same as English Presbyterian Theology.
Wednesday, June 04, 2014
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WCF vs. 3FU Holiness (Sabbath part 3) |
Tuesday, June 03, 2014
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Why I think Youth Groups fit in the Reformed Tradition |
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
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Three Forms vs. Westminster - Fourth Commandment Part 2 |
Friday, May 09, 2014
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WCF vs. Three Forms - Fourth Commandment Part 1 |
Thursday, May 01, 2014
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3FU vs. WCF Worship |
Let me
start by simply saying I believe both documents teach the Regulative Principle
of Worship (RPW). For those who may be
unfamiliar with the RPW it simply states that whatever is not commanded in
worship is thus forbidden. It has some
important caveats: 1. You are to use good and necessary consequences and 2.
This applies to elements of worship, not circumstances of worship. An element would be an essential part while
circumstances are simply the accidents of those essential parts such as what
time worship meets? What time is not
essential, but does have to be answered.
If one is having worship, then it happens at a time; thus, it is an
accident of worship. Other examples
include such things as chairs or pews, or whether you stand or sit or kneel for
prayer. Prayer is the element, the body
position then has to be answered, but is merely a circumstance of prayer. Again both documents seems to agree on this
point, so let us dive into the differences.
Monday, March 31, 2014
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Why New Calvinism is not Calvinism |