MATTHEW WIREMAN: The Bible encourages us to employ every sense we have in the worship and adoration of the God who breathed into our nostrils life and the sweetness of grace.
JOHN R. GILHOOLY: The chief organizing idea of Thomas's question 13 is an epistemological doctrine that Aquinas has from Boethius (and Aristotle): everything is known according to the power of the knower.
Backus’ approach to civil and religious matters during the American Revolution provides insights into how complex and difficult these days were for the Baptist movement.
MATTHEW AARON BENNETT: For contemporary missionaries seeking to address the innovative heresy of the Islamic Jesus, retrieving the tried and true answers of our orthodox forebears is necessary.
Have you ever wanted to read the classics of the Baptist tradition but didn’t know where to begin? This list takes you through a baker’s dozen of some of the most important Baptist works ever written.
MICHAEL A. G. HAYKIN: Evangelicalism may have crystallized in the Anglophone world of the North Atlantic in the 1730s, but it is now a global phenomenon.
CODY GLEN BARNHART: Some sixty years before the Council of Nicaea, a significant group of bishops condemned the use of “ousia language” to describe God.