
Incarnation Anyway and the Local Church
I am not a self-proclaimed pastor-theologian, and yet I accept the label when others grant it to me. I believe it is important for all

I am not a self-proclaimed pastor-theologian, and yet I accept the label when others grant it to me. I believe it is important for all

By the end of the eighteenth century, Particular Baptists in England were experiencing spiritual renewal after a period of decline. The reasons for this decline

This essay endeavors to bring much needed light to a conversation that has a surplus of heat. I have attempted, for the most part, to

Editor’s Note: This is part 3 in our Lyceum Disputation series from various historians considering competing visions of historical methodology. See Part 1 here and part 2

Editor’s Note: This is part 2 in our Lyceum Disputation series from various historians considering competing visions of historical methodology. See Part 1 here and stay tuned

Modern technology has proven a boon to the proliferation of ‘celebrity’ preachers. The expansion of social media has made online pulpits accessible across the globe

Baptists don’t always know where to look within our own tradition when big theological questions arise. In my study, when I turn to trustworthy historical

Editor’s Note: This is part 1 in our Lyceum Disputation series from various historians considering competing visions of historical methodology. See Part 2 here and

Compiled, Edited, and Introduced by Jordan A. Senécal Introduction In the antebellum years, a letter was written by the pen of Jean-Henri Merle d’Aubigné (1794–1872)—Merle,

I am not a libertarian about free will.[1] I think there are good objections to libertarianism. But many criticisms of libertarianism rest on confusions, and