January 24, 2009
A panel of WSC faculty answer questions related to the legacy of John Calvin in the church and in the world.
By:
Calvin’s ideal of friendship informed the way he went about his business as a reformer.
The preached Word was central to the spiritual flourishing of the church of the reformation as well as the church as it exists today.
Calvin clearly distinguished the Gospel itself from the marvelous benefits and vast effects it produced.
Calvin was passionate for the glory of God in worship, which had concrete implications for the life of the institutional church.
January 23, 2009
What leads us to honor Calvin as a biblical commentator half a millenium after his birth is the consistently superior quality of his comments.
John Calvin matters still because he is a teacher of the truth.
January 19, 2009
A panel of WSC faculty answer questions related to the topic of the church being missional and Reformed.
An analysis of doing missions in a post-Christian society.
We need a fresh conviction about the truth of the gospel and an understanding of the times.
The Apostle Paul was both a master theologian and a missionary despite modern objections to this fact.
You cannot have a theology that is completely determined by God’s sovereign grace and a practice that views salvation as a cooperative venture between God and human beings.
January 18, 2009
An analysis of what it means to be missional in light of the emergent church movement.
To be truly Reformed is to be missional and to be missional is to be Reformed.
January 14, 2007
The misuse of the law by Christians is a perennial problem down through the ages of church history.
The Law of God was endorsed, expounded, and embodied by Christ.
A theological and historical analysis of the second use of the law.
How the Law of God informs our understanding of how we help one another grow in Christ.
An analysis of Jesus’ relationship with the Mosaic Law.