Home » Articles posted by Kent Brandenburg (Page 129)

Author Archives: Kent Brandenburg

Were the Reformers Heretics? Appendix Part 1

Please note that the entire series entitled “Were the Reformers Heretics”? can now be viewed by clicking here as one complete essay. The post below originally went from: “Apart from their connection of baptism and salvation …” to:  “Idolaters …  part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone” (Revelation 21:8).”

Continue Reading →

2 Corinthians 2:12-17: An Imperative Passage for a Right View of Ministry Success

The Apostle Paul had spent long and valuable time to establish the church at Corinth, left there, and then the church turned off the right path in numerous ways that you can read in 1 and 2 Corinthians.  It was a wreck.  The latest and greatest travesty was a mutiny against Paul by false teachers who would […]

Continue Reading →

New resources at “Theological Compositions”

There are a variety of relatively recently posted resources at my “Theological Compositions” website that I thought you might find of interest.  These include: 1.) In the Bibliology section, a work entitled “Texts Where the Deity of Christ is Attacked or Denied in Modern Bible Versions Because of Corruptions in the Greek Critical Text, with a […]

Continue Reading →

How To Keep Children Safe

I wish the twenty children and six adults in Connecticut had not been murdered last week and I hope the best for the families of the victims.  Proceeding from such an incident should arise a discussion about how to keep children safe.  But no.  The media and politicians spawn a debate about gun control.  Isn’t […]

Continue Reading →

Were the Reformers Heretics? part 11

Please note that the entire series entitled “Were the Reformers Heretics”? can now be viewed by clicking here as one complete essay. The post below originally went from: “Baptists stand for the necessity of conscious … ” to: “Saints associated with the Romish whore …”

Continue Reading →

Cult-Like Tendency in Modern Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism, part three

I think the word “cult” gets thrown around too easily, but I’m still using it in this series (part one, part two).   I’m not saying “cult,” but “cult-like tendency.”  Cults don’t have history on their side.   They find a new teaching and practice that contradicts historical doctrine and application.  If there is to […]

Continue Reading →

Were the Reformers Heretics? part 10

Please note that the entire series entitled “Were the Reformers Heretics”? can now be viewed by clicking here as one complete essay. The post below originally went from: “William Tyndale, translator and promulgator …” to: ” The Regulative Principle was an important component …”

Continue Reading →

Applying Biblical Texts to Ecclesiastical Separation?

Recently Dave Doran, pastor and seminary president, wrote on his blog about a post by Lance Ketchum on ecclesiastical separation.  Ketchum had named Doran in a negative way in his article, and then Doran riffed on it with a very short essay with a link to an article he had written about a related passage. […]

Continue Reading →

Separation and Sectarianism, An Article Review

In the interest of understanding biblical separation, I offer some criticism of an article by Rick Flanders at the Revival Focus blog.  I have a narrow focus in my review, dealing only with the separation topic, and not with revival, soteriology, discipleship, nor sanctification.  Just because I don’t touch on those doesn’t mean that I […]

Continue Reading →

Were the Reformers Heretics? part 9

Please note that the entire series entitled “Were the Reformers Heretics”? can now be viewed by clicking here as one complete essay. The post below originally went from “The Wesley brothers and the Methodist denomination …” to the sentence: “The Wyclifites, though obliged to keep concealed …”  

Continue Reading →

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

Pages

Recent Comments

Archives

Meta