Courage in the PCA
by Ben C. DunsonThe greatest challenge facing the Presbyterian Church in America is the temptation to adopt harmful therapeutic concepts. Continue Reading »
The greatest challenge facing the Presbyterian Church in America is the temptation to adopt harmful therapeutic concepts. Continue Reading »
Keller was a lover of God and of people. He relished the conversation, was unafraid of pushback from skeptics, and courageously launched out into broken spaces that others had abandoned. God bring us more Tim Kellers. Continue Reading »
The shapers of Hawaii's Christian monarchy lie alongside conspirators who undid that same monarchy. Continue Reading »
Unlike some evangelicals for whom church membership is adiaphora, for Presbyterians and Reformed Christians, membership and active involvement is part of a congregation’s DNA. Continue Reading »
At the PCA General Assembly, the majority agreed that separating from the National Association of Evangelicals was the way to better protect the consciences of its pastors, and the way to better unite—to gather in Jesus’s name in gratitude at the foot of the cross. Continue Reading »
The PCA has reaffirmed biblical teaching on sexuality despite loud voices promoting the opposite. Continue Reading »
In the debate over the PCA's endorsement of the Nashville Statement, the two sides of the denomination seem to be talking past each other. Continue Reading »
Christianity is a religion of losers. To the weak and humble, it offers a stripped and humiliated Lord. . . . . Continue Reading »
The Venerable” is not a title used among Presbyterians, but it fits few people better than John H. Leith, the highly respected professor of theology at Union Theological Seminary in Virginia. Dr. Leith attended the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) this summer in Milwaukee. His . . . . Continue Reading »