This Thanksgiving, Be Thankful the Pilgrims Tried Communism–And It Didn’t Work
Guest post by Dr. Gregory Soderberg The “first Thanksgiving” is one of the treasured legends of our American beginnings. You […]
By Rhett Burns Donald Trump is an exclamation point, a bolded font, an underscore, an orange highlighter, drawing attention to
By Levi Secord I like Matt Chandler. I’ve benefited from both his books and preaching. On many central and secondary
By Jesse Sumpter In the midst of the theological and cultural battles in our time–Revoice, Woke theology, Feminism–a wonderful resource
By George Grant Watkins’ Bookshop in Cecil Court, just off Charing Cross between Leicester Square and Covent Garden in London,
By George Grant The Church is Plan A. And there is no Plan B. The Church is the means by
Poet, literary critic, and novelist, Arthur Quiller-Couch, was best known for his incomparable anthology, The Oxford Book of English Verse.
Haarlem is a beautiful little Dutch town on the River Spaarne, fifteen minutes by train from Amsterdam. Founded sometime in
When I was in seminary, the “Church Growth Movement” was just getting its sea legs. So, of course, it was
The years leading up to the Scottish Disruption and those immediately afterward produced some of the most remarkable servants of
The horrific ruthlessness of ISIS, the brazen cruelty of Boko Haram, the obsessive repression of the North Korean Juche, the
In his classic book, The Holiness of God, R.C. Sproul bemoans the absence from our vocabulary of certain, once-familiar, King
“And thus was he called Ichabod, for the glory of the Lord had departed.” 1 Samuel 4:21 The rising tide
It is one of the great ironies of our day that Christians can pray, “Thy will be done on earth
In 1821, Dr. John Rippon, pastor of the New Park Street Chapel in Southwark, London, began a ministry to the
“We ought to bring our minds free, unbiased, and teachable, to learn our religion from the Word of God.” Isaac
“The most practical and important thing about a man is his view of the universe. The question is not whether
By the 16th century virtually no one disagreed on the fact that the West needed to be reformed. What they