Podcast: John Piper Answers Common Questions about the Second Coming (John Piper)
John Piper makes the case that although questions about the second coming are important, there's an even more fundamental question that we all must ask ourselves: Am I truly longing for Christ's return?
God Is Sovereign and We Are Responsible
J. V. Fesko
Exploring the theological past can unearth wonderful theological truths that are incredibly helpful for our own growth in grace and enable us to understand all the more how mighty and merciful God truly is.
Communing with the Holy Spirit
Jonathan K. Dodson
In order to experience the Spirit’s power, we need know the Spirit as a Person, to begin a relationship with him through prayer.
Pastoral Concern about Evangelical Prophecy
Joel R. Beeke,
Paul M. Smalley
The question about the cessation or continuation of special revelation has very practical ramifications for the Christian life, for God’s special revelation carries great authority.
Is Your God Too Small?
Paul David Tripp
I’m persuaded that much of our fear, anxiety, discouragement, and hopelessness is the result of bad theology. At its core, what is the Bible all about? The existence, character, and plan of God.
3 Questions about Creation: Who, How, and Why?
Kevin DeYoung
When considering the creation of the universe, there are three principal questions we can ask: Who? How? and Why?
Why All Christians Should Care about Systematic Theology
Peter J. Gentry,
Stephen J. Wellum
Biblical theology provides the basis for understanding how texts in one part of the Bible relate to all other texts.
10 Things You Should Know about C. S. Lewis
Joe Rigney
Lewis is a master of the soul. He understands the human heart, in all its deceitfulness and grandeur, both in its good design and in its twisted corruption.
What Is Our Only Hope in Life and Death?
John Calvin,
Timothy Keller
Because Jesus gave himself for us, our lives no long belong to us—we surrender our bodies and our souls to the Lord.
5 Myths about Biblical Theology
Drew Hunter
The agenda of biblical theology isn’t driven by the questions we bring to the Bible, but by the focus of the Bible itself.
7 Things the Holy Spirit Does in and for Our Salvation
Kevin DeYoung
The work of the Holy Spirit is the means by which all that Christ accomplished comes to benefit the elect. The Holy Spirit does (at least) seven things in and for our salvation.
What Does the Bible Say about the Incarnation?
Elyse Fitzpatrick
God the Son became the Man, Jesus. He lived the life we should have lived and died the death we deserved.
The One Word That Explains the Whole Message of the Bible
Chris Bruno
I don't know if you know this, but the Bible is not ultimately about you—the Bible is about God.
The Doctrine of the Church in the Bible
Paul uses the picture of the body to teach the horizontal dimension of union with Christ.
The Book of Revelation Is Not Just about the Future
Charles E. Hill
The symbolism of the book ranges through the entire Old Testament canonical Scriptures and drives us back to the very beginning.
In the Beginning God Created a Priest
David S. Schrock
While priesthood is not defined or assigned until Sinai, we can see how priesthood in Israel finds an original pattern in Genesis.
Could You Be Emphasizing the Saving Work of Christ Too Much?
Marcus Peter Johnson
The saving work of Christ has been so distanced from his person that the notion of a saving personal union with the incarnate, crucified, resurrected, living Jesus strikes us as rather outlandish.
Why It Matters That Jesus Was and Still Is Human
Dane Ortlund
The impression often seems to be that the Son of God came down from heaven in incarnate form, spent three decades or so as a human, and then returned to heaven to revert back to his preincarnate state.
7 Tips for Researching and Studying Theology
Joel R. Beeke,
Paul M. Smalley
The following seven principles are useful for researching a theological paper, preparing to write an article, or developing a full systematic theology one piece at a time.
What Is Distinct about the Theology of Ephesians?
Benjamin L. Merkle
Why has this small letter had such a big impact on the church? The answer, at least in part, is due to the depth and diversity of topics emphasized in the letter.
A 30-Day Crash Course in Systematic Theology
We've created a free, 30-day crash course in systematic theology designed to give you an overview of key doctrines and show how they connect to the specific passages of Scripture.
Why It’s Both Possible and Impossible to Know God
Joel R. Beeke,
Paul M. Smalley
It is possible to know God because God has made himself known. Our knowledge of God is real but never exhaustive.
When the Supreme Somebody Became Nobody
Alistair Begg
It’s what the Lord Jesus took to himself that humbled him, not what he laid aside. It was in taking to himself humanity that he became nothing.
Don’t Read the Bible on Shuffle
Greg Gilbert
The Bible is a single, sweeping narrative about how the living God makes and keeps his promises to save sinners.
10 Things You Should Know about the Reliability of the New Testament Writers
Norman L. Geisler,
Frank Turek
We have all these reasons to support the idea that the New Testament writers relentlessly stuck to the truth. And why wouldn’t they?
5 Questions about the Sacraments
J. I. Packer,
Joel Scandrett
What is a sacrament and what is its purpose in the church? Learn answers from To Be a Christian: An Anglican Catechism.
How Prayer Actually Works: To the Father, Through the Son, By the Spirit
Fred Sanders
You don’t have to get your Trinitarian theology all sorted out before you can pray to the Trinity. Our God hears prayers. He does not wait for us to pass the theology test before he listens to us praying.
4 Reasons Why We Need Biblical Theology
Robert Cline,
Nick Roark
To read the Bible faithfully, we need the proper tools. The discipline of biblical theology is one of those helpful tools.
What Is the Christian Religion If You Subtract Our Union with Christ?
Sam Allberry
Without our union with Christ, Christianity is nothing. We’re not left with a diminished Christianity; we’re left with no Christianity at all.
4 Reasons Justification and Sanctification Are Inseparable Gifts
R. Lucas Stamps
Justification and sanctification are inseparable gifts of redemption because they flow from the unified work of the triune God and his electing, redeeming, and renewing mercy.