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Two Minds for Neo-Calvinism
In his foreword to Cory C. Brock and N. Gray Sutanto’s Neo-Calvinism: A Theological Introduction , George Harinck notes: Internationally the interest in neo-Calvinist dogmatics is on theAn Evangelical Journey with Mike Cosper
Mike Cosper is the director of CT Media and the producer of Christianity Today ’s podcast The Rise and Fall of Mars Hill . He’s the author of several books, including Recapturing the WonderChristina Rossetti: A Woman for All Seasons
As the Pre-Raphaelite painter William Holman Hunt was working on The Light of the World (1851–1854), his portrayal of Jesus knocking on a vine-covered door, he found perhaps an unlikelyPresbyterians Yesterday and Today
Presbyterians continue to play an important role in American religious life. While making up less than 5% of the population today, historically Presbyterians have punched above their weightPaul Johnson: A Modern Victorian
On the 12th of January this year, British journalist and writer Paul Johnson died at the age of 94. Setting to the job of writing about him, it quickly started to seem as if 94 years wereHorace Mann and the Irony of Secular Education
Unless we live in the night when all cows are black, we occupy a multihued world whose contours become more distinct as light intensifies. Our tendency to simplify brings us deeper into theBrother Andrew: God’s Smuggler
Modern Christians typically visualize martyrs as historical figures, such as believers killed for entertainment in ancient Rome’s Coliseum. However, Christians of all varieties continue toSaint Paul the Not-Quite Revolutionary
In the New Testament, Paul introduces himself to his readers as an “envoy” and an “ambassador” of Christ Jesus. While we might be quick to glance over such designations or translate themIs the New Right Fascist?
A common experience for American conservatives is to hear a progressive call their policy positions “fascist.” Usually the connection between said policy and fascism is, at best, tenuous: