Theology

  • The Flood of Noah’s Day: Extent and Purpose

    A while back I mentioned that as I was scouring the blogosphere I had come upon a skeptic’s challenge to answer what they deemed tough questions for the Christian faith. My first go around dealt with God’s omnipresence and omniscience in relation to the question presented in the garden: “Adam, where are you?”; “Adam, who…

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  • Back in the Saddle with Original Sin: A Review of “Why Romans 5:12-21 Does NOT say We Are Born Guilty”

    Do you like cake? Do you enjoy eating it? So do I, and I think I shall have a slice.1 Recently, I had responded to a fellow blogger (Haden Clark) in light of his denial of the doctrine of Original Sin. Wherever you may fall on this particular issue, this is an important biblical doctrine.…

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  • Clarifying Faith and Evidence Not Being Equal

    In my last post I spoke on the nature of “faith and evidence.” Faith is an a priori commitment that has a direct effect on how one views various forms of evidence. According to Scripture (cf. Heb 11.1-3) one’s faith is foundational to the way in which the interpretation of facts come. I am not…

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  • Faith and evidence are two very important elements of the Christian faith, but they are not equal’s. The undergirding assumption of unbelieving thought is always this: I will follow where the evidence leads, and to where it leads there I shall place my trust. Of the two in this scenario which is given supremacy? Obviously,…

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  • So I do not run aimlessly; I do not box as one beating the air. But I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified (1Cor 9.26-27) If Christians are called to be at war with the surrounding culture. If the gospel may be rightly…

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