What Does “Led By or Of the Spirit” Mean?

If you are a professing Christian, you have heard such a sentence as, “I was led by the Spirit.”  I’ve heard it in the form of a question, “Are you led of the Spirit of God?”  It can be put in the negative, “He isn’t led of the Spirit,” very often speaking of a believer, […]

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Sleepy Habits

In the early 17th century, Puritan Richard Sibbes preaches a sermon entitled, “The Bruised Reed and Smoking Flax,” published in 1630 in a book with the same name, The Bruised Reed and Smoking Flax, in which he said: Keep grace in exercise; it is not sleepy habits but grace in exercise that preserveth us. Whilst the soul is […]

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Sermons on the Sabbath & Lord’s Day: Old and New Testament Evidence, and Seventh-Day Adventism Examined

I have had the privilege of preaching a series on the Sabbath and its relationship to the Lord’s Day.  Topics covered include the Sabbath as Israel’s sign of creation and redemption; the way the Sabbath points forward to redemptive rest in the Lord Jesus Christ; Seventh-Day Adventist, Lutheran, Puritan, and dispensational Baptist views of the […]

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Justification In Job, pt. 2

Part One Justification by faith is both an Old Testament and a New Testament doctrine.  It reads like a major theme in the book of Job, the oldest Old Testament book.  Job’s friends speak to him about justification and Job answers about justification.  Is Job justified? A related aspect to justification is a common Old […]

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Justification In Job, pt. 1

When someone thinks of Job, the book of Job from the Old Testament of the Bible, maybe he doesn’t think of “justification.”  I’ve taught through the whole book twice, once fast and the second fairly slowly.  Recently I was reading through it the second time this year, moving through the Bible twice in this year, […]

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The Psalter Headings–Infallibly Accurate Scripture, Correctly Ascribing Authorship to David, etc.

Many today question whether the headings of the Psalms are inspired Scripture, and whether they accurately ascribe authorship to David, Asaph, and so on.  The headings to the psalms are inspired, just like the rest of the Bible, and when they say that a psalm was composed by David, Asaph, Heman, or Moses, they record […]

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An Orthodox View of Our English Bibles? Considering Fred Butler’s KJVO Book and the Doctrine of Preservation

Whenever I read the word, “Bibles,” I get a bit of a chill down my spine.  Which Bible is the right Bible if there are plural Bibles, not singular Bible?  Isn’t there just one?  Why are we still producing more and different Bibles?  How many are there?  What I’m describing is the biggest issue today […]

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Cosmology, the Big Bang, and the Creation Description in Isaiah 40:22

See This Post As a Part One Cosmology is not a degree in cosmetics, even though distantly related; it means “the science of the origin and development of the universe.”  Kosmos is the Greek word for “world.”  All forms of that Greek word are found 187 times in the New Testament, translated, “world.”  With this in […]

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Why is the Holy Spirit called the Holy “Spirit”?

Last Friday we asked some questions, including the following:   Why is the third Person of the Trinity named “the Holy Spirit”?   After all, “God is a Spirit” (John 4:24), so the Father and the Son both possess the attribute of spirituality, of being a “Spirit,” equally with the third Person.  So what is […]

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John 1:9-13 Say That Faith Precedes Regeneration

Salvation is of the Lord (Jonah 2:9), meaning that it is not by works (Titus 3:5-6)  It is by grace alone (Ephesians 2:8-9).  It is a gift of God (Romans 6:23). Faith is not a work.  The following are my two favorite places that teach that: Philippians 1:29, “For unto you it is given in […]

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