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"Amillennialism 101" -- Audio and On-Line Resources

 

Living in Light of Two Ages

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Thursday
Jun032010

The Source of True Teaching

From the August 2009, Tabletalk

Q. What rule hath God given to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy him? 

A. The Word of God, which is contained in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, is the only rule to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy him.

(Westminster Shorter Catechism  Q & A 2)

When someone begins a statement with “I think God is like…,” I immediately know that this person doesn’t have a clue as to what God is like. The reason I can say this is because God is an infinite spiritual being, which means that we can know nothing about Him unless He has revealed Himself, which He does through creation and in His Word. While creation tells us that God is eternal and all-powerful (Rom. 1:20), the creation cannot tell us that God is triune, nor that He sent His eternally begotten Son to save us from our sins. The knowledge of these things must be revealed to us in God’s Word, in which we find the supreme revelation of God in the person of Jesus Christ (John 14:9). This is why when someone attempts to tell us what God is like apart from Scripture — where God chooses to reveal Himself — we can be sure that all they can give us is mere opinion. And since all men and women are liars (Ps. 116:11), such opinion is apt to be wrong, no matter how sincerely offered (Rom. 1:22–23).

To read the rest of this article, Click here

Wednesday
Jun022010

Mike Horton in CT -- Twenty Years Later

Christianity Today has posted Mike's review of N. T. Wright's book After You Believe:  Why Character Matters (HarperOne, March 2009).  (h.t. Scott Clark)

Horton argues that like Wright's other works, After You Believe is characterized by much wisdom and insight, but is marred by Wright's dismissal (and at times misrepresentation) of Lutheran and Reformed teaching on the same subject.

Here's Michael's conclusion:

"While there are many good biblical-theological studies that make the same points, Wright—ever the master of metaphor and turns of phrase—is especially effective in communicating the richness of the Bible's eschatological horizon to a wide audience. Nevertheless, his imprecision about the views that he targets for criticism is careless, depriving him—and his readers—of resources and allies for a message that is on so many points a vital and necessary corrective."

You can find the entire review here:  Click here

Tuesday
Jun012010

Mike Horton on TV -- 20 Years Ago!

 



An old television interview featuring Mike Horton has resurfaced (Click here).  This is from 1990-91 when Mike released his book Agony of Deceit (1990), and then appeared on a number of TV programs to promote the book.

By the way, love the glasses . . . and the mustache.
Tuesday
Jun012010

"Do All to the Glory of God" -- 1 Corinthians 10:14-33

Here's the audio from Sunday's sermon.

Click here

Sunday
May302010

This Week's White Horse Inn

The Formation of the Canon

Why were some books chosen as part of the biblical canon while others were rejected? Why do Catholic Bibles have an extra section called the Apocrypha? Was the selection process primarily about the exercise of power in determining what ultimately became Scripture, or a submission to the inherent authority of sacred texts? These questions and more will be addressed on this edition of the White Horse Inn.

http://www.whitehorseinn.org/



Saturday
May292010

Who Said That?

"A sure warrant for looking forward with hope to deification of human nature is provided by the incarnation of God, which makes man god to the same degree as God himself became man.... Let us become the image of the one whole God, bearing nothing earthly in ourselves, so that we may consort with God and become gods, receiving from God our existence as gods.  For it is clear that He who became man without sin (cf. Heb. 4:15) will divinize human nature without changing it into the divine nature, and will raise it up for his own sake to the same degree as He lowered himself for man's sake.  This is what St Paul teaches mystically when he says, '...that in the ages to come he might display the overflowing richness of His grace' (Eph. 2:7)."

Leave your guess in the comments section below.  Please, no google searches or cheating.  Answer to follow in one week.

Friday
May282010

Tonight's Academy Cancelled

Hear about the big tanker fire on the 91 Fwy? 

Its between Ken Samples' house and Christ Reformed!

Fortunately, no one was hurt, but the freeway will be shut down for hours (maybe for a day or more).

So, tonight's Academy has been cancelled.

 

Friday
May282010

Tonight's Academy Lecture -- Samples Wraps Up His Series

When:  Join us tonight at 7:30 p.m. when Professor Kenneth Samples will wrap up his Academy series entitled "Historic Christianity’s Seven Dangerous Ideas”.  The lecture for this evening will be Suffering Isn’t all Bad: The Greater Good of Suffering.

What:  “Dangerous Ideas” in such disciplines as philosophy and science are ideas that challenge the standard paradigm (accepted model) of the day. These ideas go against what most people naturally think to be true and real. Such revolutionary ideas tend to threaten accepted beliefs and often contain explosive world-and-life view implications for all humanity. Historic Christianity contains numerous beliefs that are theologically and philosophically volatile in the best sense of the term. The Christian faith contains powerful truth-claims that have succeeded in transforming the church and turning the world upside down. This series of lectures will explore seven such provocative beliefs proclaimed by historic Christianity.

Textbook: This is the topic and content of a new book that Kenneth Samples is presently working on to be published by Baker Books (2012).

Where:  The Academy meets at Christ Reformed Church in Anaheim.  The lectures begin at 7:30 p.m., are free of charge, and are followed by a time for questions and answers, as well as a time for fellowship and refreshments.

Who:  Kenneth Samples is a senior research scholar at Reasons To Believe (RTB) and teaches at the Academy and Adult bible study classes at Christ Reformed Church.  Kenneth encourages believers to develop a logically defensible faith and challenges skeptics to engage Christianity at a philosophical level. He is the author of Without a Doubt and A World of Difference.  He has also written articles for Christianity Today and The Christian Research Journal.

Wednesday
May262010

"Be Strong in the Lord" -- Ephesians 6:10-24

The Fifteenth and Final in a Series of Sermons on Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians

One of the most distinctive features of Paul’s letters is that he opens them with doctrinal instruction and closes them with the application of that doctrine to the Christian life.  As we come to the end of Ephesians, we see Paul engage in this characteristic practice yet again–only this time with a bit of a twist.  In Ephesians 5:15, Paul directs us to “Look carefully then how you walk,” which is one of the ways Paul exhorts us to give attention to how we live our lives as Christians.  But as he often does, Paul quickly moves from generalities to specifics, as the apostle spells out how believers are to walk.  All Christians are to submit to Christ, wives are to submit to their husbands, husbands are to love their wives as Christ loved the church, children are to obey their parents, and slaves are to obey their earthly masters.  Having discussed the order of things within the Christian household, Paul now issues a stirring call for Christians to stand firm against the spirit of the age by clothing themselves in the spiritual armor given them by God.  As Paul sees it, the Christian life is a life of spiritual warfare.  Therefore, Paul summons us to battle.  Believers must put on God’s armor all the while praying for God’s strength so that we might stand.

We wrap up our series on the Book of Ephesians as we make our way through the concluding verses of chapter six.  This section of Ephesians includes one of the most familiar and vivid images in all of Paul’s writings–Christians are to put on the whole armor of God and do combat with the forces of darkness around us.  Paul’s depiction of the Christian life as one of spiritual warfare is an apt conclusion to a letter such as this one in which Paul has spoken in big picture terms about God’s eternal purpose being worked out in history through the saving work of Jesus Christ, specifically our Lord’s sacrificial death for our sins, and his triumphant resurrection from the dead.  Since those Christians in the churches in Asia Minor to whom Paul is writing were living in a very hostile and pagan environment, the image of warfare is appropriate.  Being part of a Christian minority in a city such as Ephesus which is dominated by paganism necessitates a form of combat between two very different ways of thinking and doing.

Unfortunately, in much of contemporary evangelicalism and Pentecostalism “spiritual warfare” has become a category for talking about spiritual combat with the unseen forces of Satan in an unseen world.  While Paul does indeed speak of combating the Devil and the spirit of the age, Paul’s focus is on the objective truth of the gospel and those who deny that truth.  His focus is not on the invisible world of demons and angels, where the real action supposedly takes place.  Paul is deeply concerned about those struggling Christians in these churches who must live out their faith in daily life in the presence of those who see nothing wrong with sexual immorality, debauchery, with worshiping a pantheon of pagan “gods,” and who practice all those things which go with paganism–fertility rites, spells and incantations, divination, secret ceremonies, and the worship of creatures (the Roman emperor) rather than the creator.

Having set forth how the Christian home ought to be ordered–submission to Christ, always keeping the example of Christ’s humility and sacrifice before us, and in submitting to divinely-established authority–Paul closes the letter by once again exhorting us to live out those doctrines he has set forth in chapters 1-3.  And as is characteristic of his letters, Paul’s call for believers to stand firm in the face of the paganism all around them is grounded in the promise of the gospel.

To read the rest of this sermon, Click here

Monday
May242010

Friday Night's Academy Lecture Posted

Here's the audio from Ken Samples' academy lecture from May 21, entitled, "Humankind’s Value & Dignity: The Image of God."

Click here