Take Up & Read
Search By Category
- Abraham 1
- Affliction 2
- Anthropology 1
- Atheism 1
- Baptism 1
- Biblical Counseling 7
- Calvinism 2
- Canon 2
- Christian Life 14
- Church Discipline 2
- Church History 4
- Confessionalism 3
- Confessions of Fatih 4
- Covenant Theology 4
- Culture 3
- Devotional 36
- Doxology 4
- Election 2
- Evangelism 6
- Exegetical Studies 5
- Family Worship 2
- Fear of Man 1
- Genesis 1
- Global Missions 1
- God 3
- God's Sovereignty 2
- Government 1
- Hermeneutics 9
- Historical Books 1
- History 1
- Jesus Christ 4
- John Bunyan 1
- Justification 2
- Liturgy 9
- Old Testament 1
- Origins 1
- Pentateuch 1
- Podcast 32
- Prayer 2
- Psalm 119 34
- Reformation History 1
- Repentance 1
- Resurrection 1
- Romans 8:28 1
- Sermon Manuscript 9
- Sin 3
- The Gospels 1
- The Lord's Day 1
- The Lord's Supper 2
- The Reformation 4
Blogcast: Of Good Works - WCF 16.1
In this episode, we examine Chapter 16 of the Westminster Confession of Faith: Of Good Works.
Of Good Works: WCF 16.1
Certainly, much of what Christ did was miraculous, but it is the underlying compassion, mercy, beneficence, and obedience to the Father that accompany them for which we are called to have as the underlying motivation in our own good works.
Blogcast: The Perfect Sacrifice & Obedience of Christ
In this episode, we examine Chapter 8 of the Westminster Confession of Faith: Of Christ the Mediator
Truly Man Part 1: The Road to Chalcedon
The humanity of Christ is essential to our salvation. That may seem like a given. After all, how could we be redeemed and then represented by One who doesn’t share our nature? Besides, it’s “obvious” in our time that Jesus was human. Everyone, apart from the ignorant or intellectually dishonest, agrees that Jesus was a human who lived some 2000 years ago in the Roman province of Palestine.
A Confessional Hermeneutic
Among the number of alarming trends growing in the broader evangelical church is the prevailing attitude of “Bible alone” in hermeneutics and theological interpretation. More and more, laypeople and pastors alike are looking to lose tradition in favor of biblicism. This trend is unhelpful at best and dangerous at worst.