January 7, 2026
by John Fonville
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Category:
Worship and Liturgy
| Tags: gospel, worship, assurance, Liturgy, Reformation, Word of God, Thomas Cranmer, Book of Common Prayer, Word and Sacrament, reformed theology, scripture, Daily Office, 1662 Book of Common Prayer, Justification by Faith, Anglican Theology
The gospel is not learned by force, but received through Christ’s faithful giving of himself in worship. In the liturgy—especially as shaped by the 1662 Book of Common Prayer—Christ acts through his Word, addressing, forgiving, and nourishing his people as they hear, confess, and receive the gospel again and again, until it becomes second nature....
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January 6, 2026
by John Fonville
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Category:
Worship and Liturgy
| Tags: Biblical theology, worship, assurance, legalism, means of grace, Liturgy, Christology, Word and Sacrament, reformed theology, Anglican Theology, Psalm 22, Hebrews 2, Public Worship, Church Worship, Confession of Faith
The phrase “God inhabits the praises of His people” is widely used to suggest that singing brings God’s presence into worship. This article examines Psalm 22 in its biblical and Christ-centered context, showing that Scripture teaches something richer and more comforting: God reigns among His covenant people, and praise is the public confession of that reign. Drawing ...
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December 2, 2025
by John Fonville
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Category:
Reformation Anglicanism
| Tags: sola scriptura, heidelberg catechism, gospel, Regeneration, Reformation, creeds, Anglicanism, hermeneutics, Thirty-Nine Articles, Carl Trueman, Anglican Theology, prima Scriptura, biblical authority, Tradition 1, Tradition 2, Tradition 0, Keith Mathison, Scripture and tradition, church tradition
Some Anglicans describe biblical authority using the phrase prima Scriptura, placing the Church’s tradition as the lens through which Scripture is interpreted. This article explains why the Reformation doctrine of sola Scriptura is fundamentally different. Drawing on Keith Mathison’s categories of Tradition 0, Tradition 1, and Tradition 2, and Carl Trueman’s insights...
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November 13, 2025
by John Fonville
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Category:
Covenant Theology
| Tags: gospel, Biblical theology, sanctification, law and gospel, new covenant, assurance, covenant theology, covenant of grace, covenant of works, mosaic covenant, justification, sola fide, republication, reformed theology, scripture, Reformation Anglicanism, theology, Anglican Theology, MacArthur Study Bible, 1 Peter, exegesis, pastoral theology
This article exposes a serious theological error in the MacArthur Study Bible’s commentary on 1 Peter 1:2, which mistakenly imports the works-principle of the Mosaic Covenant into the New Covenant. By requiring a believer’s “promise of obedience” for covenant entrance, the note confuses law and gospel, collapses justification into sanctification, and undermines the...
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November 4, 2025
by John Fonville
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Category:
Anglican Theology & Practice
| Tags: Anglican, Anglicanism, Reformation, Thirty-Nine Articles, Eucharist, Lord’s Supper, Holy Communion, sacraments, Eucharistic Adoration, transubstantiation, Book of Common Prayer, Cranmer, Gerald Bray, Anglican Theology, Word and Sacrament, Reformation Anglicanism, The Center for Reformation Anglicanism
This article examines whether the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion forbid Eucharistic adoration. Drawing on Articles 25 and 28 and Gerald Bray’s The Faith We Confess, it explains why Anglicans reject reservation, elevation, and adoration of the consecrated elements, and instead embrace Word and Sacrament as Christ’s appointed means of grace....
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November 4, 2025
by John Fonville
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Category:
Anglican Theology & Practice
| Tags: Book of Common Prayer, Anglicanism, Anglican Formularies, Reformation Anglicanism, church polity, episcopacy, Bishops, Ashley Null, Cranmer, Anglican Theology, Anglo-Catholicism, Baptist polity, esse, bene esse, apostolic succession, gospel primacy, The Center for Reformation Anglicanism
This article responds to recent criticisms of episcopacy by showing how Reformation Anglicanism distinguishes between the esse and bene esse of the church. While Anglo-Catholics treat bishops as essential to the church’s very existence, Reformation Anglicans hold that the gospel alone is the essence of the church, with qualified episcopacy serving its well-being. Rooted ...
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