Tag Archives: theology

Why Pilgrim’s Progress is Better Than The Sequel: Part The Third

This is an outline of why Pilgrim’s Progress is better than the sequel. The sequel even features a bodyguard who as Pastor Bennett stated, is the allegorical equivalent of Arnold Schwarzenegger (or at least an 80’s action hero) who is … Continue reading

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Why Pilgrim’s Progress is Better Than The Sequel: Part The Second

Conflict is the engine of fiction. . . . The more hopeless you can render the situation, the more powerful your ending will be. — Jerry B. Jenkins[1] A life without tests and challenges is a life without growth and … Continue reading

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The Wages of Sin Is Death and The Debts of Orthodoxy are Heresy

The seesaw of Docetism is that whenever Christ’s humanity and divinity are not balanced, heresy will result, and this will have an effect on how sanctification is viewed. If the humanity side of the seesaw is overleaned on, Arminianism results, … Continue reading

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Why Pilgrim’s Progress is Better Than The Sequel: Part The First

A recent medal of honor recipient who had his face blown off by jumping on a grenade before going on to have his face reconstructed, accidentally parachuting into Arlington cemetery, and running a marathon, said that the common core of … Continue reading

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Projecting Feeling as Thought

Jeremiads teach us the impermanence and misguiding of emotions through a false filter as shown by Amusing Ourselves to Death and the Screwtape Letters. My father valued Spiritual emotions as one of the greatest and most important books he ever … Continue reading

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Why It is Biblically Consistent to Ask God to Destroy Strongholds of Satan with Fire From Heaven

The translation authorized by the government of England states that Christ rebukes his disciples in Luke 9:56 that He came not to destroy but to save. The translation authorized by R. C. Sproul does not state this as canon and … Continue reading

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Theological Inner Ring Ghetto Club

C. S. Lewis says that we listen to some men because they seemed to have been closer to God than we are. In this case, Lewis indicates that the primary danger in reading the Bible is not an overindulgence in … Continue reading

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Assorted thoughts on Cynicism: Being The Sixth Part of A Critique of Philip Graham Ryken’s Written in Stone

The first five parts of this critique can be found here, here, here, here, and here. Ryken’s analysis of gossip sounds reasonable enough. His lack of Scripture to support his argument is odd. One emphasis of Calvinism is cynicism toward the idea that … Continue reading

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The Presbyterian Temperament and Francis Schaeffer’s Search for Absolute Truth

While stating that Presbyterians have a tendency toward a melancholic temperament may be seen as an exaggeration, Mark Twain connected the two as inseparable in Tom Sawyer.[1]  J. I. Packer stated that a melancholic character is a mind that functions … Continue reading

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CANTICAL INCONSISTENCIES: Being The Fifth Part of A Critique of Philip Graham Ryken’s Written in Stone

The first four parts of this critique can be found here, here, here, and here. To open his discussion of the seventh commandment, Ryken begins by quoting the only nominally surviving song of Solomon at length and comments on it: … Continue reading

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