
“Think and Smoke Tobacco”: Eighteenth-Century Christian Perspectives on Tobacco Use
This online essay is significantly abridged from a larger essay on this subject published in The Hanover Review: The Journal of The London Lyceum 2.1
This online essay is significantly abridged from a larger essay on this subject published in The Hanover Review: The Journal of The London Lyceum 2.1
As I ponder the vision of The London Lyceum, I believe there are old lighthouses within the Baptist heritage, waiting to be relit, that can
[Editor’s Note: The original title of this essay has been modified since its original publication due to unnecessary offense and confusion that distracted from the
In the aptly titled The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin confronts a vexing question from the perspective of natural selection: why be good? Darwin
The things I love deeply are also the things that irk me most easily. And most profoundly. This makes sense: when we love, we care.
Can non-Christians ever act with virtue? Is it possible, in other words, for them to do the right thing for the right reason? In Christian
I first came across the writings of Thomas Forsyth Torrance (1913-2007) while taking a PhD seminar at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in the Fall of
O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you? It was before your eyes that Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified. (Galatians 3:1 ESV) In his
“What do you think about Doug Wilson?” is a question we receive often as pastors, and it’s sometimes hard to know exactly how to answer.
Editor’s Note: This is part 5 in our Lyceum Disputation series on metaphysics and the Christian. Stay tuned for further installments which can be found here when available.