Making Sense of the Millennium: Resurrection in Revelation 20
The Strait Gate and the Narrow Way: Bible Studies on the Doctrine of Salvation and Repentance
The Strait Gate and the Narrow Way: Bible Studies on the Doctrine of Salvation and Repentance. By Eddie R. Galyean. Np: np, nd.128 pages. Paper. Np. While helping a friend organize his bookshelf, I came across this book. Intrigued by the title, as repentance based salvation always gets my attention, I began skimming through the
What God Wishes Christians Knew About Christianity
What God Wishes Christians Knew About Christianity. By Bill Gillham. Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 1998, 382 pp. Paper. The author of the popular “Lifetime Guarantee” has written another Christian living book designed to get Christians to think. In the course of eighteen chapters, Gillham shares eighteen principles that he believes God wishes Christians recognized and
Confession of Sins in the Spirit-Filled Life
A Response to Hodges: How to Lead a Person to Christ, Parts 1 and 2
What Our Readers Are Saying…
The following are comments by various Grace in Focus readers concerning the state of the Free Grace movement in the U.S. and abroad. They are meant to awaken the church to action. Therefore, it is our prayer that you will see the great need for the gospel of grace to be clearly taught and proclaimed
Simon Magus: Believer or Unbeliever? – Acts 8:12-24
This article, which has been slightly modified, was printed originally in The Reign of the Servant Kings: A Study of Eternal Security and the Final Significance of Man (Hayesville, NC: Schoettle Publishing Co., 1992), pp. 327-28, and is used by permission. by Jody Dillow Under the preaching of Philip, a magician named Simon Magus believed
“But If It Yields Thorns and Thistles”: An Exposition of Hebrews 5:11–6:12
J. Paul Tanner Chapter six of Hebrews, particularly vv 4-6, remains a classic interpretative challenge as well as a theological battleground concerning the issues of eternal security, perseverance, and assurance of salvation. Great evangelical stalwarts have parted company at this juncture. On the one hand, we find no less a scholar than I. Howard Marshall
Grace in the Arts: F. W. Boreham – Essayist Extraordinaire
JAMES TOWNSEND I. Introduction The name of Boreham only rhymes with the word boredom. At that point the similarity ceases. The popular preacher Warren Wiersbe said: “It amazes me that my favorite biographical handbook, Who Was Who in Church History, mentions Caesar Borgia…but contains not one line about Frank W. Boreham.” In 1975 Ruth Graham