fbpx

droach

STUDENT POST: Hopeless Situations & God’s Power

Editor’s note: This post is part of a series featuring outstanding excerpts from student papers at the BibleMesh Institute, which offers affordable online training for local churches, schools, and ministries. The author’s name has been withheld for privacy and security purposes. He is a missionary in Northeast Asia. Sometimes in life the Lord calls us …

STUDENT POST: Hopeless Situations & God’s Power Read More »

By Steps and Degrees: A Short Introduction to Preparatory Grace

Editor’s note: This post first appeared in Ad Fontes, a publication of the Davenant Institute. Certain doctrines of Reformed theology, and their associated sub-doctrines, are brought into the limelight more than others. For example, there is a rich endowment of Protestant works on the doctrine of justification.[1] One cannot say the same, however, of the sub-doctrine …

By Steps and Degrees: A Short Introduction to Preparatory Grace Read More »

Womb with a View

Who or what is in the womb of a pregnant mother? Answers to that question have ranged historically from a fully-formed miniature human being—called a homunculus—to a blob of tissue. A 2002 book shows us how twenty-first-century medical imaging technology has given us a clear window to the womb. Photographer Alexander Tsiaras and author Barry Werth …

Womb with a View Read More »

Did Jesus Believe the Laws of Logic?

Jesus, Truth, and Logic I recently read that Jesus didn’t believe the laws of logic, in particular the law of non-contradiction. Apparently the laws of logic are at home in an Aristotelian worldview, whereas Jews had no problem simultaneously holding conflicting ideas (e.g., Proverbs 26:4-5). The author also suggested that truth and knowledge are entirely personal (thereby …

Did Jesus Believe the Laws of Logic? Read More »

A Glorious Thought for a Dismal New Year

Perhaps my favorite of John Bunyan’s works is his little volume titled The Jerusalem Sinner Saved. It is really an exposition of Luke 24:47, Luke’s expression of the Great Commission, in which the Lord Jesus tells his disciples to preach the gospel “beginning at Jerusalem.” The people of the city and its leaders had repeatedly rejected, scorned, …

A Glorious Thought for a Dismal New Year Read More »

The Lessons of Roe

I was what the sociologists call an “early adopter” of feminism. Soon after arriving at college, in 1970, I knew that it was the religion for me. I had discarded the religion I grew up with, Christianity, as an insultingly simpleminded thing, but feminism filled the gap. Like a religion it offered a complete philosophical …

The Lessons of Roe Read More »

Get the latest news and updates from BibleMesh