Tradition or Innovation?: Southern Baptists and the Ecclesial Office
July 1858, like so many summer months before, forced the townspeople of Greenville, South Carolina to head indoors during the hottest hours of the day.
July 1858, like so many summer months before, forced the townspeople of Greenville, South Carolina to head indoors during the hottest hours of the day.
Editor’s Note: This is part 4 in our Lyceum Disputation series on metaphysics and the Christian. Stay tuned for further installments which can be found here when available. As
Introduction Christian nationalism’s abrupt entrance into modern discourse has summoned a generous host of critics, and some in my own Baptist tribe have taken an
Editor’s Note: This is part 3 in our Lyceum Disputation series on metaphysics and the Christian. Stay tuned for further installments which can be found here when available. As
Editor’s Note: This is part 2 in our Lyceum Disputation series on metaphysics and the Christian. Stay tuned for further installments which can be found here when available. As
As people around the world reflect this week about Christ’s resurrection, I want to recommend that you read this concluding excerpt from John Collett Ryland’s
Editor’s Note: This is part 1 in our Lyceum Disputation series on metaphysics and the Christian. Stay tuned for further installments which can be found here when
When myths are perpetuated for long periods of time, they become, in the minds of many, fact. Among Baptists, there is a longstanding myth that
Editor’s Note: This is part 4 in our Lyceum Disputation series considering Baptists, Religious Liberty, and the State. Stay tuned for further installments. As with all our work,
John of Salisbury nearly ten centuries ago said that, “Bernard of Chartres used to compare us to dwarfs perched on the shoulders of giants. He