Perseverance of the Saints: Can You Lose Your Salvation?
If you could lose your salvation, you would. The doctrine of perseverance isn't about the strength of your grip on God — it's about the…
Read Full Post →If you could lose your salvation, you would. The doctrine of perseverance isn't about the strength of your grip on God — it's about the…
Read Full Post →Christian grief is not the absence of sorrow — it is sorrow held by hope. When loss breaks you, Scripture doesn't offer explanations. It offers…
Read Full Post →Election and predestination are among the most debated doctrines in Christianity. This article explains what the Bible actually teaches about God's sovereign choice in salvation…
Read Full Post →Dead men cannot decide. Total depravity doesn't mean humanity is as bad as possible — it means every part of us is touched by sin.…
Read Full Post →The modern church has quietly replaced doctrine with emotion, conviction with comfort, and truth with feeling. When worship is measured by goosebumps rather than gospel,…
Read Full Post →Is God sovereign over cancer, corruption, and catastrophe? The Bible says yes—and the answer is more unsettling and more comforting than you expect. A Reformed…
Read Full Post →The theological framework of John 3 — the necessity of regeneration, the nature of the new birth, the atonement foreshadowed in the bronze serpent, and…
Read Full Post →The historical world behind John 3 — the Pharisees and Sanhedrin, Nicodemus the ruler, first-century Jewish expectations of the kingdom, and the bronze serpent of…
Read Full Post →Key Greek vocabulary in John 3 — anothen, gennao, pneuma, hypsoo, monogenes — and the theological depths hidden beneath familiar English translations.
Read Full Post →The theological framework of John 2 — the nature of signs, Christ's authority over temple worship, the body as temple, and the difference between signs-faith…
Read Full Post →The historical world behind John 2 — first-century Jewish wedding customs, the Herodian temple complex, and the economics of sacrifice in Jerusalem.
Read Full Post →Key Greek vocabulary in John 2 — oinos, semeion, naos, zelos — and the theological depth hidden beneath the English translation.
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