Post Category: Reformation Anglicanism

Subscribe to the RSS Feed
  • Featured Posts
  • All Posts

Every Church Has a Creed: Why Evangelical “Mission Statements” Are Not Enough

Articles of Religion

Many Evangelical churches replace historic creeds with corporate-style mission statements, valuing vision over confession. Drawing on Carl Trueman’s The Creedal Imperative, this post argues that every church has a creed—whether public and accountable or private and untested. Reformation Anglicans, by contrast, embrace the ancient creeds “proved by most certain warran...

Keep Reading

The Next Big Thing vs. the Old Paths: A Reformation Anglican Critique

The Nicene Creed Papyri

American Evangelicalism often chases after “the next big thing,” driven by novelty and personality rather than confession and continuity. In contrast, Reformation Anglicanism finds stability and joy in the “old paths” of Scripture, creed, and confession. Drawing on Carl Trueman’s The Creedal Imperative, this essay shows why creeds are not lifeless relics but livi...

Keep Reading

Mary and the Gospel: A Reformation Anglican Response to Today’s Vatican Ruling

Of Purgatory

This article examines the Vatican’s recent doctrinal note Mater Populi Fidēlis (“Mother of the Faithful People of God”) from a Reformation Anglican perspective. While the note rejects the Marian title Co-redemptrīx, it leaves untouched Rome’s official teachings on cooperative grace and Mary’s ongoing intercessory role as Mediātrīx. Drawing on the Catechism of...

Keep Reading

A New Garment Before God

In her book, The Lamentation of a Sinner, Katherine Parr recounts her conversion to the truth of the gospel of justification by grace, through faith, in Christ alone....

Keep Reading
Subscribe