Today's Headlines
Sunday, April 04, 2021
Here's what happened this week, April 4-10, in Christian history. They include the conversion of “The Bible Answer Man” to Eastern Orthodox Christianity and the consecration of a controversial early church bishop.
Police in Britain shut down a Good Friday service at a Roman Catholic church in London, claiming violation of COVID-19 rules, and threatened to impose a fine of $280 on each person sitting on the pews, according to media reports.
Archeologists in Jerusalem’s Old City have discovered a box containing artifacts including a rare silver “Tyre Coin,” which, they believe, might have been used by pilgrims to pay the Temple tax during the reign of King Herod.
Wycliffe Associates, one of the world’s leading Bible translation organizations, is providing much-needed technology to translators living in remote regions that both protects and accelerates the translation of the Scriptures. 
Evangelist Franklin Graham has urged the nation to pray that Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson will sign a bill into law that would prohibit the hormonal and surgical mutilation of minors suffering from gender dysphoria.  
During these days of great upheaval and uncertainty, what a privilege it is to trust in Jesus Christ, the only one who ever conquered the grave.
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Seminary Professor Exposes Today’s “Cheap Epistemology” Calling For A Return to Scripture

Seminary Professor Exposes Today’s “Cheap Epistemology” Calling For A Return to Scripture

I have in my library a worn out, orange, paperback book entitled Basic Christian Doctrines, first published in 1962 and then reprinted in 1971.1

I do not remember when I first picked up this book, but I do know I was in my twenties. I also recall wanting to be personally equipped to teach and defend these doctrines to the Awana leaders I served with.2

The book contains 45 chapters on the essential foundations of evangelical faith. Each chapter is written by a theological heavyweight of a bygone era. The whole work is edited by the late, great Carl F. H. Henry. Forty-five chapters, each one plumbing the depths, the nuances, and the distinctive features of evangelicalism’s cardinal doctrines.

The book is remarkable to me today for two main reasons.

First, it uses the word basic in its title.

By today’s standards, however, this book is anything but basic. It explores theology in deep and meaningful ways. It deals with nuances that would be lost on most modern Christians.

What I am saying is that what a past generation considered basic, today's generation would consider too advanced to bother with.

The book differentiates the communicable from the incommunicable attributes of God. It discusses Original Sin, and the imputation of Adam’s guilt. It opens up the doctrine of the Mystical Union between Christ and His people, and includes a chapter on the Kenotic Theory relative to the person of Christ.

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If these are yesterday’s basics, doesn’t that indicate there is something radically different today?

A second equally disturbing reason I find the book remarkable is that each of its chapters was first published, not in some abstract theological journal, but in the popular level magazine Christianity Today. The theologically rich content of this book was considered suitable for the average Christian reader of its day.

In my estimation, the seminary student of today would have a hard time plowing through this book. Many pastors would struggle with it. Yet Christianity Today found its content needful and suitable for its broad readership back in the day.

Something has changed.

I suspect that what has changed is the answer to a singularly important question which we must never stop asking.

That question is: Where do you get your truth?

The technical name for this topic is epistemology. Ever since Satan suckered Eve into questioning God's Word in the Garden of Eden, God’s people have waged war against the downward pull of cheap epistemology.

Cheap Epistemology

There is a growing roster of cheap substitutes for the in-depth teaching of the Word of God. These substitutes are cheap because they are imitations of the real thing. They are cheap because they are intellectually effortless. They are cheap because they capitulate to the spirit of the age, wimping out... Read More

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