The Rich Young Ruler
This talk is quite a few years old and was rescued from an old cassette tape. The ending is incomplete due to the quality of the original recording equipment.
Christian Leadership and Mentoring: Contemplative Theology’s Trojan Horse
The Heavenly Good of Earthly Work
The Heavenly Good of Earthly Work. By Darrell Cosden. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 2006. 148 pp. Paper. $17.95. Most Christians throughout the history of the church have truly struggled to bring their spiritual lives into a healthy balance with the everyday matters of work life. Darrell Cosden has written an enriching glimpse of “a
Hoodwinked and Happy? Evangelicals, Calvinism, and Why No One’s Answering the Problem of Evil
Hoodwinked and Happy? Evangelicals, Calvinism, and Why No One’s Answering the Problem of Evil. By Daniel Gracely. np: Grandma’s Attic Press, 2006. 450 pp. Paper. $24.99. Gracely’s book focuses on only one issue: how Calvinism fails to solve the problem of evil. Gracely shows through numerous quotes that a primary problem in Calvinism is the
Postmodernism 101
Postmodernism 101. By Heath White. Brazos Press: Grand Rapids, MI 2006. 176 pp. Paper, np. Considering my own feelings on postmodernism and the effects I’ve seen of it, I actually enjoyed reading this book. The author makes it clear that he is writing in a very broad sense and he does not go into great
Should Pretribulationists Reconsider the Rapture in Matthew 24:36-44? — Part 1 of 3
A Critique of Bonhoeffer Speaks Today: Following Jesus at All Costs
Salvation and Rewards
Used by permission of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, Philadelphia, PA. All rights reserved. For further information about Dr. Barnhouse and his ministry, visit their website. By Donald Grey Barnhouse Dr. Barnhouse (1895-1960) was a pioneer in radio preaching, and, for 33 years, was the pastor of Philadelphia’s historic Tenth Presbyterian Church. He authored more
Beware of Situational Theology
By Jeremy D. Myers I sometimes hear pastors say that they don’t have systematic theology, they have pastoral theology. As a pastor myself, I used to nod my head in agreement. I too am concerned with the way some theologians seemed too caught up with dotting every theological “i” while neglecting the task of serving