Posts Tagged with "Confessional Theology"

Subscribe to the RSS Feed
  • Featured Posts
  • All Posts

The Return of Enthusiasm in Modern Evangelicalism: Recovering the Spirit Through the Means of Grace

Holy Spirit Parament

A Pentecost reflection on Martin Luther’s critique of “Enthusiasm”—the attempt to seek the Holy Spirit apart from the outward means of grace Christ instituted. The Reformation was not against the Holy Spirit, but against separating the Spirit from the preached Word, baptism, and the Lord’s Supper where Christ has promised to be found....

Keep Reading

“Get in the Word”? Recovering the Reformation Distinction Between Law and Gospel

Open Bible

Many Christians speak about “getting in the Word,” but what word? Scripture is not a flat, undifferentiated message. In the Reformation tradition, God speaks in Scripture in two fundamentally different ways: law and gospel. The law exposes sin and reveals our need for Christ; the gospel announces what Christ has done for sinners and gives forgiveness, righteousness, pe...

Keep Reading

A Response to the Public Statement Regarding Sam Allberry

Bible on Lord's Table

In response to the public statement released by the elders of Immanuel Church regarding ACNA-ordained minister Sam Allberry, Paramount Church offers a biblical, confessional, and canonical assessment grounded in Scripture, the Reformed confessions, and the Constitution and Canons of the Anglican Church in North America. This statement addresses pastoral qualification, chur...

Keep Reading

The Forgotten Lord in “Lordship Salvation”

NIcene Creed

The Nicene Creed confesses both the Son and the Holy Spirit as Lord. This article shows how Reformation Christianity upholds the one saving Lordship of the triune God, contrasting it with “Lordship Salvation,” which turns the confession “Jesus is Lord” from a declaration of Christ’s deity into a moral condition for salvation. True lordship is confessed in the gos...

Keep Reading
Subscribe