Category Meet the Puritans

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Indwelling Sin: Is There Hope?

Read more about indwelling sin in the author’s previous post. Owen, in the opening chapter of his work The Mortification of Sin states that, “The vigor, and power, and comfort of our spiritual life depends on the mortification of the deeds of…

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Law Opposed to Law

For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death. Romans 8:2   In our circles today, it is not popular to speak about the Gospel as Law…

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What Is Indwelling Sin?

In 1616, ninety-nine years after Martin Luther began his reforming work in Wittenberg, John Owen was born in Oxford, England. John Owen, it may be said, contributed as much to the theological landscape of the 17th century and Martin Luther…

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The Evil of Earthly-Mindedness

If one characteristic could describe the Puritan movement as a whole—apart from their personal piety—I believe it would be the Puritans’ ability to penetrate both heart and mind. Their knack for bringing conviction to the stubborn, hope to the hopeless,…

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Exemption from Condemnation

Thomas Manton began his exposition of Romans 8 by telling his hearers “what condemnation importeth.” The world stands under condemnation because of sin—that black backdrop has made this chapter’s “No condemnation!” all the more precious to the believer. Manton next…

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Still Protesting

On June 3rd, 1981 William Thomas pitched a ramshackle tent outside the gates of the White House with a large sign that read, “Live by the bomb, die by the bomb.” He was so gripped by the threat posed by…

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Thanksgiving: 400 Years Later

Americans today are used to thinking of Thanksgiving as a national holiday, but it was not always that way. During the years following the Pilgrims’ feast in 1621, the holiday was celebrated primarily in New England, with other regions exhibiting…