Search results for: synod of carthage
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Inward apathy toward the Lord masked by outward obedience is a real and constant threat in any church. Keenly aware of this danger, the Puritans z...
The term Bibliology (from Greek biblos meaning “book”) refers to the study of the nature of the Bible as revelation. It often includes such topics...
During the mid-seventeenth century, England was embroiled in a civil war between the king’s forces and those of parliament. The aftermat...
In the fifteenth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew we begin to see signs of the tide turning against Jesus by the leaders of the country, and accor...
Many Reformed churches today trace their roots back to the Puritans, and have even adopted as their standards the Westminster Confession and Catec...
Perhaps there is no greater testimony to the enduring nature of Luther's reforms than the fact that the Reformation continued to gather streng...
When the Puritans came to the New World, they had no intention of establishing a new religion. What they did want to do, however, was bring their ...
Assurance of one’s salvation is an important part of Protestant faith, and one of the many marks that sharply distinguishes it from Roma...
The religious climate in England in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries was cold and dry. Onto this barren landscape came George W...
The Enlightenment had a profound effect on Western thought. During this period, some sought to reconcile the Christian faith with modern thought, ...