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Popular Evangelical Historian on Truth Serum about the Church

Carl Trueman, professor of historical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary, department chair of Church History, author, and Cornerstone Presbyterian Church pastor, is very popular with conservative evangelicals—highly respected.  With that as a first consideration, if you didn’t know already because you are not a regular reader of my blog here or when I wrote constantly […]

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Election 2012: Do Rich People Like Romney Really Pay Less Taxes?

In order to win the election, the Obama-Biden campaign is counting an even greater amount of stupidity than normal from the American population.  Part of the no-voter ID push of the democrat party is counting on people who are too stupid or lazy to get a free voter ID.   Those kind of people are […]

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Repentance Defended Against Antinomian Heresy: A Brief Defense of the Indubitable Biblical Fact that Repentance is a Change of Mind that Always Results in a Change of Action, part 1

For approximately the first two-thousand years of Baptist history, Baptist churches—the churches established by the Lord Jesus Christ—have defended the fact that when a lost sinner repents and is born again, a change of action will necessarily follow.  The fact that repentance is a change of mind that results in a change of action is […]

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The Worldview of Romney and Ryan and the 2012 Presidential Election

Romney and Ryan are the first non-Protestant combination Presidential and Vice-Presidential ticket in the history of American elections.  America has been characteristically a Baptist/Protestant country, much of which stems from what was left in Europe.  This flies in the face of a national history-long trend.  I actually don’t think that President Obama and Vice President […]

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Lure Them In, pt. 4

Part One   Part Two   Part Three Jesus used a fishing metaphor to describe evangelism.  In Matthew 4:19, He said, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.”  I’ve noticed that people then take that analogy and go further with it than what Jesus does.  They talk about “findin’ good fishin’ spots,” “spots where […]

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Representative Quotations from the Earliest Christian Writings— Are These Men Trinitarians or Arians?

This is a continuation of part 4 here.  The entire study, under the title Did the Trinity Come from Paganism? is available here and here. The allegation that Trinitarianism was invented in A. D. 325 at the Council of Nicea, or even later, is a historical monstrosity. William G. T. Shedd writes: “[T]he following particulars . . . which […]

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The Hyles-Schaap Fallacies

Because of the size, scope of influence, and history of First Baptist Church in Hammond, IN (FBC), the recent sinful acts by Jack Schaap generated a lot of reaction.  The responses are an interesting window into people’s understanding of the Bible and God’s work.  Several tried to make a tie between Hyles-Schaap and all independent, […]

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Deconstructing Jack Schaap

Under the leadership of Jack Hyles, beginning in 1959 in Hammond, IN, First Baptist Church became the largest attended church in the world.  Before he died, he made sure his successor would be his son-in-law, husband of his daughter Cindy, Jack Schaap.  For that reason among others, it was world-wide news, especially religious, when Schaap […]

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Did the Trinity Come from Paganism? part 4

This is a continuation of part 3. Actually, unlike Trinitarianism, both Arian and Sabellian or modalistic theology resulted in large measure from the influence of pagan thought upon Christianity.  This fact is the affirmation of real historians quoted in context, rather than the creation of quotations slashed and burned from their contexts or from the […]

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Lure Them In, pt. 3

Part One.   Part Two. Let’s say you had a church that was doing everything that the Bible teaches a church to do, and even does all of them well with real affection toward God.   Great expositional, biblical preaching.  Widespread, regular, and bold evangelism.  Giving.  Obedient.  Qualified leaders.  Practices scriptural discipline.  Discipleship.  Unsaved people […]

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  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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