
Welcome to Meet the Puritans 2.0
Welcome to Meet the Puritans, where the dead still speak (Heb. 11:4). I’d like to thank all the faithful readers of the old Meet the Puritans site and for the Alliance in having the vision to make it new…

Welcome to Meet the Puritans, where the dead still speak (Heb. 11:4). I’d like to thank all the faithful readers of the old Meet the Puritans site and for the Alliance in having the vision to make it new…

In A.D. 325 the Council of Nicaea was convened by Constantine, emperor of the Roman Empire, to unify the Church’s teaching. Of its various accomplishments, it is best known for settling and formalizing the orthodox view of Christ;…

The steady flow of articles on theology posted on this website in recent months has been enormously helpful. As I have found myself encouraged and challenged by much of what has been said, I thought I might be able…

Some years ago I attended a service where the preacher noted he was thankful that God the Son had come in the flesh and that two natures, the divine and the human, were “blended” in one person for us and…

In the year 325, over 200 bishops met in the city of Nicea in order to settle what was then the most pressing issue of their day: who is Jesus Christ. What was astounding about this council of Christian…

This week on Theology on the Go, Dr. Jonathan Master is joined once again by Dr. Mark Jones, who has been serving as Senior Minister at Faith Vancouver Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Vancouver, Canada since 2007. Dr. Jones has written…

Benjamin B. Warfield wrote a little article for the Homiletic Review in 1897 titled, “The Indispensableness of Systematic Theology to the Preacher.” As anything written by Warfield, it is a thoughtful and edifying piece with a clear aim. According to…

Not many of us will have the privilege and the opportunity in our lives to write out an entire systematic theology. However, because the Christian life is built on doctrine (starting with the confession that Jesus Christ is Lord), we…

Why do so many professing Christians think that following Christ is about their personal happiness and success? Perhaps … these professors no longer endure sound teaching and have itching ears and so accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own…

EDITOR’S NOTE: The article below is a surrejoinder from G.K. Beale in response to Peter Enns’s published rejoinder to Dr. Beale’s JETS Review Article of His Book, Inspiration and Incarnation. I thank Peter Enns for responding to my review article…