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

 

Living in Light of Two Ages

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Sunday
Dec242017

This Week's White Horse Inn

Joy to the World!

When the angels appeared before the shepherds in Bethlehem, they came bringing a message of “good news” rather than tips for improving our life or the world around us. On this program, the hosts will discuss the nature of the Christian gospel and its roots in the Old Testament promises of a coming redemption. They’ll also discuss the relationship between good news and the “great joy” that we experience in response as they conclude their series on The Meaning of Christmas.

Click Here

Monday
Dec182017

Christmas Week at Christ Reformed Church (December 18-24)

Sunday Morning, December 24:  On the Fourth Sunday in Advent (Christmas Eve) we take up the messianic prophecy of Isaiah 9:1-7.  Our worship service begins at 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Afternoon:  In our on-going study of the Heidelberg Catechism, we are considering the Lord's Prayer as a pattern for Christian prayer, focusing this week upon the petition, "give us this day our daily bread" (Lord's Day 50, Q & A 125).   Our catechism service begins @ 1:15 p.m.

Service of Lessons and Carols -- Friday, December 22 @ 7:30 p.m.

We invite you, your family and friends to join us for our Service of Lessons and Carols.

This traditional service includes nine readings from Scripture recounting the fall of humanity, the promise of a Messiah, and the birth of Christ. Readings are interwoven with carols sung by the choir and congregation, along with brief sermon on the prologue to John's gospel.

Wednesday Night Bible Study:  Resumes in the New Year

The Academy is on hiatus until 2018.

For more information on Christ Reformed Church you can always find us here (Christ Reformed Church), or on Facebook (Christ Reformed on Facebook).

Sunday
Dec172017

"My Sheep" -- Jeremiah 23:1-8

Here's the audio from this morning's sermon for the third Sunday in Advent.  The sermon is on the Good Shepherd in Jeremiah 23:1-8, and John 10:1-30.

Click Here

Sunday
Dec172017

This Week's White Horse Inn

What Child Is This?

“What child is this, who laid to rest, on Mary’s lap is sleeping?” This wonderful hymn reminds us every Christmas of the sublime mystery of the incarnation. But what does it really mean to confess that Jesus is God in human flesh? On this edition of the program the hosts will continue their discussion of The Meaning of Christmas by taking a look at the two natures of Christ and his threefold office as prophet, priest, and king.

Click Here

Friday
Dec152017

Fond Memories of R.C.

Years ago, we were taping White Horse Inn broadcasts during the Philadelphia Conference on Reformed Theology (PCRT).  R. C. joined us for taping.  I took this photo of R. C. and Vesta when we finished.  Didn't think much about it then.  Means much more today.

Some of the most enjoyable moments of my life have come while watching these two good friends (R. C. with Rod Rosenbladt) playfully torment each other about Luther and Calvin, then engage in profound theological discussion, then tease each other again.

White Horse Inn taping sessions are always a blast, but this one was especially memorable.  Here we are with R. C. in Donald Gray Barnhouse's old studio next door to Tenth Presbyterian in Philadelphia.

Monday
Dec112017

This Week at Christ Reformed Church (December 11-17)

Sunday Morning, December 17:  We move into the Advent season focusing upon messianic prophecy.  Our text for this Sunday is Jeremiah 23:1-8 and the prophecy of a good shepherd placed over God's flock.  Our worship service begins at 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Afternoon:  In our on-going study of the Heidelberg Catechism, we are considering the Lord's Prayer as a pattern for Christian prayer, focusing this week upon the petition, "Thy will be done" (Lord's Day 49, Q & A 124).   Our catechism service begins @ 1:15 p.m.

Wednesday Night Bible Study:  Resumes in the New Year

The Academy is on hiatus until 2018.

For more information on Christ Reformed Church you can always find us here (Christ Reformed Church), or on Facebook (Christ Reformed on Facebook).

Sunday
Dec102017

"Should I not Pity Nineveh?" -- Jonah 4:1-11

Here's the audio of this morning's sermon on the Minor Prophets from the Book of Jonah (4) Click Here

Sunday
Dec102017

This Week's White Horse Inn

O Holy Night

How do the angelic announcements of Mary’s conception and of the birth of Christ relate to the Old Testament promises concerning the coming messiah, and what do they reveal about Christ’s forthcoming mission and work? On this program, the hosts are continuing their series on The Meaning of Christmas by taking a closer look at the Annunciation.

Click Here

Thursday
Dec072017

Apologetics in a Post Christian Age (Audio) -- Basic Categories (Part Six)

Here's the audio from Wednesday Night's Bible study: "Basic Categories -- The Basic Christian Truth Claim and Christ's Incarnation"  Click Here

Previous lectures in this series can be found here (scroll down): Apologetics in a Post Christian Age

Thursday
Dec072017

"Seal the Book" -- Daniel 12:1-13

The Twenty-First and Final in a Series of Sermons on the Book of Daniel

The prophet Daniel was given a vision of Judah’s future by a mysterious visitor–the pre-incarnate Lord Jesus.  In Daniel 11:2-35, Daniel’s visitor foretells in amazing detail how the people and the land of Judah will fare from the time the Jews began to return home after their captivity in Babylon ends in 538 BC, until the rise of a persecuting tyrant–Antiochus IV Epiphanes, the man who will desecrate the temple in Jerusalem in 167 BC.  After predicting the precise events associated with Antiochus IV’s rise to power, Daniel’s divine visitor begins to speak about the time of the end–moving from events in 167 BC to those which will occur in the distant future at the end of time.  Daniel learns that a figure much like Antiochus IV will arise and “do as he wills.  He shall exalt himself and magnify himself above every god, and shall speak astonishing things against the God of gods.  He shall prosper till the indignation is accomplished; for what is decreed shall be done” (Daniel 11:36).  But Daniel’s vision is not yet over.  The divine visitor tells Daniel that human history will come to a final end on that day when all the dead are raised, and God will judge all the earth’s inhabitants according to what they have done–whether good or evil.  Some of those raised from the dead will live in everlasting righteousness, while others in everlasting shame and contempt.  But instead of giving him precise details–as he had done in verses 2-35–Daniel’s visitor tells now him, “the words are shut up and sealed until the time of the end.”

With this sermon we wrap-up our series on the Book of Daniel.  We are in the concluding section of Daniel’s prophecy–chapters 10-12, which includes the third and final vision given to Daniel, a portion of which we considered in chapter 11:2-45.  We will consider the closing scene in this vision (verses 1-4 of chapter 12), before looking at epilogue to the book (vv. 5-13), where Daniel recounts his divine visitor conversing with two other beings (presumably angels), speaking about the time of the end, discussing how those things just revealed to Daniel must remain “sealed,” or closed off to Daniel and all of God’s people until the dawn of the messianic age.  

Those of us with New Testament hindsight know that the last book in the New Testament canon (the Book of Revelation) centers around the opening of a scroll–the same one which is ordered to be sealed in the concluding verses of Daniel.  The scroll’s contents are “revealed” (hence the name the Book of “Revelation” i.e., the “apocalypse”) by the Lamb (the Lord Jesus), who alone is worthy of doing so, and who, before his incarnation, revealed all of these things to Daniel in this third and final vision.  This is why the mysteries of which we will read must be sealed until the coming of Jesus, because many of the prophecies in the Book of Daniel (especially those dealing with the time of the end) make little sense until the coming of Jesus and the messianic age.

We will do two things.  First, we will consider the concluding portion of the vision of the end, which begins in verse 36 of chapter 11, and which continues into Daniel 12 (vv. 1-4).  Second, we will then look verses 5-13 which function as the epilogue to both the vision as well as the entire prophecy (i.e., the Book of Daniel).

In the first section of chapter 11 (vv. 2-35), the vision dealt with the future of Judah after the exiles began return home from Babylon.  This is the historical period known as “second temple Judaism.”  The Jews will be back in the land, not as an independent nation, but as a vassal state of first the Persians, and then the Greeks.  Judah will then be caught between two empires which will arise from the remains of the Greek empire of Alexander the Great which was divided into four smaller kingdoms–the two most prominent in Judah’s future are the Seleucids to the north and the Ptolemies to the south.  Daniel has been told how various kings from these empires will wage almost continual war upon each other, with Judah caught in the middle.  This portion of vision concludes with Daniel’s visitor foretelling of the most evil figure in the series of rulers, Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who will seek to Hellenize the Jews, and turn the temple of YHWH into a temple dedicated to Zeus–thereby desecrating it and stopping all sacrifice for sin.  It will be a terrible time for Judah, and for the people of Jerusalem, but they will prevail.

To read the rest of this sermon, Click Here