Jun 15, 2026

The core dilemma

We’ve identified a genuine theological tension—one that we address directly. The core dilemma is that God has preserved His Word, but because He chose to accomplish this through secondary causation (providential means), the exact wording of the original texts has not been preserved without variation[1]. God’s promise of preservation and the historical reality of textual diversity create an uncomfortable gap.

The Problem of Certainty

Defenders of the KJV/TR position reject the view that preservation occurred across the totality of manuscripts, primarily because they believe this approach denies average Christians certainty about which text is God’s Word, and that such variation practically invalidates inspiration[1]. Their concern is understandable: if God preserved His Word, shouldn’t we be able to identify it with confidence?

The Resolution Offered

However, God allowed variations to occur in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek copies, providentially providing all these copies to preserve Scripture—meaning preservation occurred in the totality of manuscripts rather than in a single perfect text[1]. Because God chose this method, a perfectly pure text with no variations was not possible, yet this level of purity was sufficient for His purposes[1].

Historical Precedent

Notably, early church fathers recognized variants among their biblical manuscripts but did not view these variants as damaging to Scripture’s authority[2]. Additionally, Greek New Testament manuscripts are so early and numerous that no other writing of antiquity begins to compare with their textual attestation[3].

The dilemma persists because no arguments or historical evidence are offered to identify which specific manuscript tradition represents God’s preserved Word—the claim is simply asserted[4]. This remains the unresolved tension: God promises preservation but doesn’t specify where it resides.

[1] William W. Combs, “The Preservation of Scripture,” Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal Volume 5 (2000), 5:36–37.
[2] Amy Anderson and Wendy Widder, Textual Criticism of the Bible, ed. Douglas Mangum, Lexham Methods Series (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2018), 183.
[3] D. A. Carson and John D. Woodbridge, Scripture and Truth (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1992), 148.
[4] Michael W. Holmes, “The ‘Majority Text Debate’: New Form of an Old Issue,” Themelios (1983), 8:2:14.



















“The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God stands forever.”

Isaiah 40:8 does not directly support KJV-only, verbal plenary preservation, or a perfect Bible doctrine—though it does offer indirect support for a general doctrine of preservation.

The verse is commonly cited in these debates, but it is probably not a direct promise of Scripture’s preservation.[1] The passage’s primary concern is reassuring exilic Israel about God’s reliability in fulfilling His promises of comfort, not making claims about the textual integrity of the biblical manuscripts themselves.

That said, the verse does have some relevance to preservation theology. Isaiah 40:8 is significant because, while it most directly reassures Israel that God’s comfort is genuine, it also comments about God’s word in general—God’s words cannot be overturned and last forever.[2] This offers some support for the concept of preservation, even if it isn’t explicitly affirming it.[2]

However, we reveal critical problems with using this verse to defend KJV-only or verbal plenary preservation positions. The verses that do teach preservation do not support the KJV/TR camp’s view that God has perfectly preserved the Bible to our day; instead, they only suggest a general promise of preservation without specifying how or to what extent God has chosen to preserve His Word.[1]

Defenders of the Textus Receptus appeal to a doctrine of verbal inspiration that includes providential preservation, sometimes extending to the King James Version itself—a viewpoint that goes beyond traditional inspiration doctrine and requires more than the prooftexts exegetically indicate, especially given historical evidence of manuscript variants.[3]

In short, Isaiah 40:8 affirms God’s word endures eternally, but it does not address textual transmission, manuscript reliability, or which English translation best represents the original—the concerns central to these preservation debates.

[1] William W. Combs, “The Preservation of Scripture,” Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal Volume 5 (2000), 5:26.
[2] John S. Feinberg, Light in a Dark Place: The Doctrine of Scripture, ed. John S. Feinberg, Foundations of Evangelical Theology (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2018), 747.
[3] Stanley E. Porter, How We Got the New Testament: Text, Transmission, Translation, ed. Lee Martin McDonald and Craig A. Evans, Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 55.
















יָבֵ֥שׁ חָצִ֖יר נָ֣בֵֽל צִ֑יץ וּדְבַר־אֱלֹהֵ֖ינוּ יָק֥וּם לְעוֹלָֽם׃

Translation:

“The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God stands forever.”

This verse appears as Isaiah 40:8, forming the climactic conclusion to a passage contrasting human transience with divine permanence.

Exegesis:

The verse employs a stark parallelism between botanical decay and God’s enduring word. The passage establishes that all people resemble grass and their faithfulness like flowers of the field, which wither and fall when the breath of the Lord blows upon them (Isa 40:6–8). The phrase “breath of the Lord” refers not to God’s personal Spirit but to His sovereign control over nature, including the hot desert winds that dry up vegetation[1].

The contrast operates on multiple levels. Humanity’s faithfulness and dependability fade like flower petals when God comes in glory[2]. More fundamentally, all flesh’s covenant steadfastness—relating to the reliability of people’s obedience—cannot be counted upon, as human faithfulness proves unreliable[3]. All people who oppose God will fade and wither away just as grass fades when God comes[2].

Against this backdrop of human weakness, God’s word stands in stark contrast to humanity’s fading dependability—flowers fall, but God’s word will stand, and what He promises will happen[2]. The message teaches that people are temporary, but God’s word stands forever[3]. This affirmation becomes foundational to the entire section: the prophet assures readers that God’s word will accomplish its purpose[2].

The verse’s power lies in its rhetorical movement from observable natural decay to metaphysical certainty about divine reliability—a reassurance particularly meaningful for exilic audiences facing apparent divine abandonment.

[1] Biblical Studies Press, The NET Bible First Edition Notes (Biblical Studies Press, 2006). [See here.]
[2] Gary Smith, Isaiah 40-66, The New American Commentary (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2009), 15b:97–99.
[3] Paul R. House, Isaiah: A Mentor Commentary, Mentor Commentary (Ross-shire, Great Britain: Mentor, 2018), 2:272–273.

















"Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away."

Matthew 24:35 declares: "Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away."

This verse does not support KJV-Only or Verbal Plenary Preservation doctrine, for several critical reasons:

The verse addresses Jesus’ words, not written Scripture. In Mark 13:31, Jesus declares “my words will not disappear.”[1] The statement concerns the permanence of his spoken teaching, not the textual preservation of a fixed biblical manuscript. Jesus made no claim about protecting a particular written text or translation from scribal variation.

Multiple textual versions exist. Mark 13:31 and Matthew 24:35 are not identical—Matthew introduces “insignificant changes” in the phrasing[1], yet both versions circulated as authoritative Scripture. If Verbal Plenary Preservation were true, these variations would contradict the doctrine’s core claim that God preserved every word exactly.

The saying uses metaphorical language. “Till heaven and earth pass away” is a figure of speech for permanency[2], not a literal promise about textual transmission. The verse guarantees the truthfulness and ultimate fulfillment of Christ’s message, not the mechanical preservation of every letter in every manuscript.

The original context concerns the Torah. Luke’s version likely represents a more original saying where the disappearance of heaven and earth metaphorically expresses the permanence of Torah, though Matthew’s version may use the phrase idiomatically to mean “never.”[1] The eschatological discourse version (Matthew 24:35) shifted focus from the Law to Jesus’ words—a theological reframing rather than a statement about textual preservation.

KJV-Only advocates sometimes appeal to this verse, but it simply doesn’t address manuscript transmission, textual criticism, or translation choices—the actual concerns of that doctrine.

[1] David E. Aune, Revelation 17–22, Word Biblical Commentary (Dallas: Word, Incorporated, 1998), 52c:1119.
[2] John G. Butler, Jesus Christ: His Sermon on the Mount, Studies of the Savior (Clinton, IA: LBC Publications, 2005), 7:145–146.










ὁ οὐρανὸς καὶ ἡ γῆ ⸀παρελεύσεται, οἱ δὲ λόγοι μου οὐ μὴ παρέλθωσιν.

Translation:

“Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.”

This Greek formulation appears in Matthew 24:35 and Mark 13:31, where Jesus makes an absolute pronouncement about the permanence of his teaching against the transience of creation itself.

Exegesis:

The saying establishes a stark contrast between the material cosmos and Christ’s words. Heaven here refers not to God’s dwelling place but to the whole material universe[1]. The verb παρέλθωσιν (will pass away) appears twice—first describing the fate of creation, then negated to emphasize the inviolability of Jesus’ words. This rhetorical structure underscores an almost incomprehensible claim: what seems most permanent and stable will dissolve, yet Christ’s utterances will endure eternally.

Jesus expected his spoken words to have lasting permanence[2], and within an apocalyptic context describing troubling end-of-the-world events, Jesus declared that his words were true—as true as the very existence of heaven and earth—and permanent[2]. The statement functions as a guarantee of his prophetic authority rather than a comment on written Scripture.

Jesus taught that the moral principles he conveyed would never pass away because they were the moral principles of the eternal world[1]. This connects to Old Testament precedent: the word of God endures forever (Isa 40:8), and God’s word that goes out from his mouth will accomplish what he desires and achieve the purpose for which he sent it (Isa 55:10–11). Those who regulate their lives in accordance with Jesus’ words have lifted their existence above the changes and chances of mortal life into the sphere of the eternal[1].

[1] J. H. B. Masterman, In the Footsteps of the Master: Sermon Outlines on St. Mark’s Gospel (London; New York; Toronto: The Church Family Newspaper; Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge; The Macmillan Co., 1922), 90–91.
[2] John H. Walton and D. Brent Sandy, The Lost World of Scripture: Ancient Literary Culture and Biblical Authority (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic: An Imprint of InterVarsity Press, 2013), 137–138.
























אַתָּֽה־יְהוָ֥ה תִּשְׁמְרֵ֑ם תִּצְּרֶ֓נּוּ׀ מִן־הַדּ֖וֹר ז֣וּ לְעוֹלָֽם׃

The verse reads: “You, LORD, will keep the needy safe and will protect us forever from the wicked, who freely strut about when what is vile is honored by the human race.” (Ps 12:8)

Breaking down the Hebrew more literally:

  • אַתָּה־יְהוָה (Attah YHWH) — “You, LORD”

  • תִּשְׁמְרֵם (tishmorem) — “will keep/guard them” (the needy, the faithful)

  • תִּצְּרֶנּוּ (titzerennu) — “will protect us” (synonymous with the previous verb)

  • מִן־הַדּוֹר זוּ (min-hador zu) — “from this generation” (referring to the wicked)

  • לְעוֹלָם (le’olam) — “forever/eternally”

The verse functions as a declaration of God’s protective promise. The two verbs “protect” and “guard” are synonymous, both used quite often in Psalms.[1] The phrase “this generation” refers to the evil people described in verse 8, carrying an ethical sense that classifies people as either good or bad.[1]

The structure contrasts divine faithfulness with human wickedness: while the wicked wander about aimlessly—the Hebrew word for “walk” in this form expresses the idea of walking back and forth, and when combined with “everywhere,” it means to walk around without any sense of purpose[2]—God’s protection endures perpetually for those who belong to Him.

[1] Robert G. Bratcher and William David Reyburn, A Translator’s Handbook on the Book of Psalms, UBS Handbook Series (New York: United Bible Societies, 1991), 120–121.

[2] Sherri L. Klouda and Kevin R. Warstler, “Psalms,” in Holman Illustrated Bible Commentary, ed. E. Ray Clendenen and Jeremy Royal Howard (Broadman & Holman, 2015), 554.









A critique of Verbal Plenary Preservation (VPP)

A critique of Verbal Plenary Preservation (VPP) should be made carefully, because its advocates are often motivated by a sincere desire to defend the authority and reliability of Scripture. The issue is not whether God has preserved His Word—orthodox Christianity has always affirmed that He has—but rather how God has preserved it.

What is Verbal Plenary Preservation?

VPP teaches that God has preserved every word of the original biblical text perfectly and identically in a particular existing form of the text. Among some proponents, especially those associated with the Dean Burgon tradition and certain defenders of the Textus Receptus, this means that the Hebrew Masoretic Text and the Greek Textus Receptus are the exact, infallible, and providentially preserved words of God down to every letter.

This position goes beyond the historic doctrine of providential preservation held by most Protestants.

1. The Lack of Explicit Biblical Support

The primary criticism of VPP is that Scripture teaches preservation generally, but never specifies the method or location of that preservation.

Passages commonly cited include:

  • Psalm 12:6–7

  • Matthew 5:18

  • Matthew 24:35

  • Isaiah 40:8

These texts affirm that God's Word endures forever. However, they do not state that God would preserve one specific manuscript tradition without textual variation.

For example, Psalm 12:7 likely refers to God's preservation of His people rather than the words themselves, according to many Hebrew scholars. Even if it refers to God's words, it says nothing about identifying one edition centuries later as the uniquely perfect text.

Thus, VPP often asks the biblical text to answer questions the text itself never addresses.

2. It Confuses Preservation with Perfection of Copies

Historically, Christians distinguished between:

  • Inspiration: God's act of giving the original writings through the prophets and apostles.

  • Preservation: God's providential care ensuring that His Word is not lost.

  • Transmission: The copying process through which manuscripts were handed down.

VPP tends to merge these categories.

The Bible explicitly attributes inspiration to the original writings (2 Timothy 3:16; 2 Peter 1:21). It never explicitly extends inspiration to later copies or printed editions.

God preserved His Word through thousands of manuscripts spread across different regions, despite minor variations. VPP often assumes that preservation requires absolute identity in every copy, but Scripture never states this requirement.

3. Historical Difficulties

A major challenge is identifying which preserved text is perfect.

Even among advocates of the Textus Receptus, there were multiple editions:

  • The editions of Desiderius Erasmus,

  • Robert Estienne (Stephanus),

  • Theodore Beza,

  • The Elzevir editions.

These editions differ from one another in numerous places.

If every word has been perfectly preserved in one printed text, which edition is that text?

VPP advocates frequently appeal to the general TR tradition while struggling to explain these internal differences consistently.

4. The Problem of Circular Reasoning

Critics argue that VPP often proceeds as follows:

  1. God must preserve every word perfectly.

  2. Therefore, a perfect text must exist today.

  3. The Textus Receptus is that perfect text.

  4. We know the TR is perfect because God preserved every word.

The conclusion is assumed in the premise.

A doctrine requiring acceptance of a specific printed edition without independent biblical or historical demonstration risks becoming dogmatic assertion rather than theological argument.

5. Departure from the Classical Protestant View

The major Protestant confessions strongly affirm preservation but do not teach VPP as defined today.

For example, the Westminster Confession of Faith states that the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures were "by His singular care and providence kept pure in all ages."

Historically, Reformed theologians understood this to mean that the authentic text remained available to the church through the total manuscript tradition, not that one printed edition was free from all textual difficulties.

Even theologians such as:

  • John Calvin,

  • Francis Turretin,

  • John Owen,

recognized the existence of textual variants while maintaining confidence in Scripture's authority.

Therefore, many scholars argue that modern VPP is not identical with historic Protestant orthodoxy.

6. Theological Concerns

Ironically, VPP may unintentionally shift confidence away from God's Word itself toward a particular textual theory.

The Christian faith rests upon Christ revealed in Scripture, not upon proving the perfection of a seventeenth-century printed edition.

The existence of textual variants does not undermine biblical authority. No major Christian doctrine depends upon a disputed textual reading. The abundance of manuscripts demonstrates not corruption beyond recovery, but God's providence in preserving His revelation through the witness of the whole church.

7. A Balanced Alternative

A more historically grounded position may be called providential preservation without VPP:

  • God inspired the original Scriptures perfectly.

  • God has faithfully preserved His Word throughout history.

  • The vast manuscript tradition enables the church to recover the original text with a very high degree of confidence.

  • Textual criticism, when exercised reverently and carefully, serves the church rather than undermines Scripture.

  • The authority of Scripture rests ultimately upon God who gave it, not upon any one modern reconstruction or printed edition.

Conclusion

The greatest weakness of Verbal Plenary Preservation is not its zeal for Scripture but its attempt to define preservation more narrowly than Scripture itself does. It transforms a precious promise—God's enduring care for His Word—into a precise textual theory that neither the Bible nor the historic church explicitly taught.

Christians need not choose between skepticism and VPP. One may wholeheartedly affirm that the Bible is the inspired, trustworthy, and providentially preserved Word of God while acknowledging the realities of manuscript transmission and textual variation. Such a position preserves both intellectual honesty and robust confidence that God's voice has never been lost to His people.




Biblical inerrancy

The entire original Bible was written under divine inspiration; it is the Word of God, which is without error and cannot err, and serves as the highest and sole standard for faith and life.

Biblical inerrancy represents the conviction that the original biblical texts communicate God’s truth without error, forming the foundation for evangelical faith and practice. Understanding this doctrine requires examining its theological definition, scope, grounding, and practical implications.

Theological Definition and Essential Elements

Inerrancy comprises six foundational components: divine origin (from God), human agency (through chosen writers), written form (in words), original composition (in the original texts), final authority (for believers), and errorless nature (without errors). When integrated, inerrancy means the Holy Spirit supernaturally worked through human authors with their distinct personalities and literary styles to invest the original biblical books with God’s very words, making them entirely free from error in everything they teach—including historical and scientific matters—and thereby establishing them as the infallible standard governing Christian belief and conduct.[1]

Comprehensive Scope

The inerrancy of Scripture encompasses all biblical content, not merely selected portions. The Bible remains inerrant not only in what it explicitly teaches but also in everything it addresses, whether major or minor. Whatever the Bible declares as true is true.[1] This flows from God’s nature: God neither affirms falsehood nor acts deceptively, making the entire Bible trustworthy—both its individual parts and the whole.[1]

Theological Grounding

Inerrancy rests fundamentally on God’s character. Since God cannot err, His “breathed-out” word in the original autographs cannot err.[2] Asserting biblical inerrancy and infallibility constitutes a confession of faith in God’s divine origin of Scripture and God’s truthfulness and trustworthiness.[3]

Practical Significance

Inerrancy proves essential to Christian confidence: without it, divine promises offer no assurance and divine commands demand no obedience.[2] The historic evangelical position affirms Scripture’s divine inspiration, complete trustworthiness, and full authority.[3] Inerrancy applies strictly to the original manuscripts; the Holy Spirit’s total superintendence was required uniquely for the original authors. Emphasizing autographic inerrancy actually strengthens confidence in copies and translations rather than undermining them, and biblical faith must exclude error from the original texts while remaining vigilant about potential errors in subsequent copying or translation.[4]

[1] Norman L. Geisler and Lanny Wilson, “Bible, Inerrancy Of,” in The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics: Surveying the Evidence for the Truth of Christianity (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2008), 104.
[2] David F. Farnell, Norman L. Geisler, et al., Vital Issues in the Inerrancy Debate (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2016). [See here, here.]
[3] Carl F.H. Henry, “Bible, Authority of The,” in Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1988), 1:299.
[4] Ted Cabal, “Inspiration of Scripture,” in Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, ed. Chad Brand et al. (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2003), 825.





















The Church as God’s Household: 1 Timothy 3:14-16

The Church as God’s Household

Shall we read together 1 Timothy 3:14-16

14 Although I hope to come to you soon, I am writing you these instructions so that, 15 if I am delayed, you will know how people ought to conduct themselves in God’s household, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth. 16 Beyond all question, the mystery from which true godliness springs is great: He appeared in the flesh, was vindicated by the Spirit, was seen by angels, was preached among the nations, was believed on in the world, was taken up in glory.

Brothers and sisters, we gather today around a passage that cuts to the very heart of what it means to be the church—the living, breathing body of Christ in this world. 

How People Ought to Conduct Themselves: The Practical Outworking of Faith

When we understand that we are part of something sacred—God’s own family—our behavior changes. We no longer live for ourselves alone. We serve others. We guard our speech. We pursue holiness not from fear of punishment but from love of the One whose household we inhabit.

God’s Household: The Church as Family

The church is described as “God’s household.” (1 Tim 3:14–16) This language is revolutionary. A household is not a building or an organization—it is a family. It is the place where we belong, where we are known, where we are loved unconditionally, where discipline comes from those who care for us.

This transforms our understanding of church membership. We are not a customer purchasing services. We are not a volunteer filling a slot. We are a beloved child in God’s family, with all the privileges and responsibilities that entails. We belong. We are claimed. We are cared for. And in return, we care for our spiritual siblings.

The Church of the Living God: The Distinction of Vitality

The God we serve is not dead, distant, or indifferent. He is alive, active, present. His church, therefore, is not a museum preserving ancient truths; it is a living organism through which God continues His work in the world.

A living church is one animated by the Holy Spirit, responsive to God’s voice, growing in faith and love, reaching out to the lost, caring for the broken. The church of the living God is not static but dynamic—always being renewed, always being called deeper into truth and holiness.

The Pillar and Foundation of the Truth: The Church’s Sacred Responsibility

The church is “the pillar and foundation of the truth.” We are God’s building, and no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ. (1 Cor 3:9–11)

Christ is the foundation. A pillar supports a structure; it bears weight. The church stands as a witness, declaring that God’s Word is true, that Christ is Lord, that redemption is real.

This means the church has a solemn responsibility to guard doctrine, to teach Scripture faithfully, to resist false teaching, and to live out the truth it proclaims. When the church compromises truth for cultural acceptance, when it waters down doctrine for comfort, when it tolerates false teaching for the sake of unity, it fails its fundamental calling. 

The Mystery of Godliness: Christ as the Center of All Things

Now Paul moves to the heart of everything: This is the beating heart of the church’s identity and mission. Let us examine each element:

He appeared in the flesh. The Word, Logos became flesh and made his dwelling among us. The infinite God Jesus Christ entered human history, took on human flesh, walked among us. This is the incarnation—God’s ultimate act of self-disclosure and self-giving.

Was vindicated by the Spirit. Through the Spirit of holiness, Christ was resurrected from the dead. (Rom 1:3–4) It was the Spirit’s vindication of Christ’s claims. 

Was seen by angels. The heavenly realm took notice. Angels—those magnificent beings who surround God’s throne—witnessed the incarnation, the resurrection, the ascension. The church’s faith is not built on human sentiment but on a reality that heaven itself acknowledges.

Was preached among the nations. Through the gospel, Gentiles became members of one body and sharers in the promise in Christ Jesus. The gospel crossed every boundary—cultural, ethnic, religious. Christ’s message was not confined to one people but proclaimed to all nations.

Was believed on in the world. Millions have abandoned idols, rejected false gods, and embraced His lordship. Their faith is the evidence of His reality. The church exists because people encountered the risen Christ and surrendered to Him.

Was taken up in glory. God exalted Christ to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. (Phil 2:5–11) Christ ascended and seated at the Father’s right hand, ruling over all creation.

The Church’s Relationship to Christ’s Incarnation

When the church gathers, Christ is present. When believers love one another sacrificially, they display Christ’s love. When the gospel is preached, Christ speaks. When the hungry are fed, the sick are visited, the imprisoned are remembered, Christ Himself is served. The incarnation did not end at the ascension; it continues through the church.

How we treat a struggling brother or sister is how we treat Christ. How we guard the truth is how we defend Christ’s honor. How we reach the lost is how we extend Christ’s redemptive work. The church is not merely an organization; it is the continuation of Christ’s presence in the world.

Reflection: The Weight of Our Calling

This should humble us. We are entrusted with something sacred. The world is watching to see if our conduct matches our confession. 

Practical Application: Living as God’s Household Today

How does this passage transform our daily lives? Let me offer three concrete applications:

First, conduct ourselves with the awareness that we represent Christ. Every interaction—at work, at home, in the marketplace—is an opportunity to display Christ’s character. Ask ourselves: Does my conduct reflect that I belong to God’s household?

Second, guard the truth with courage and compassion. The church is the pillar of truth in a world drowning in lies. It means refusing to compromise Scripture for cultural approval, teaching doctrine faithfully, and gently correcting those who wander from the faith. When we see false teaching spreading in our church or community, speak up—not in anger, but in love for the truth and for those being deceived.

Third, build genuine community in your church. A household is built by genuine relationships. Know our brothers and sisters. Bear one another’s burdens. Celebrate victories together. Grieve losses together. When someone is struggling, do not merely offer prayers from a distance—show up, listen, serve. This is what it means to be God’s household.

Illustration: The Lighthouse and the Storm

Imagine a lighthouse standing on a rocky coast. Its purpose is singular: to shine light into the darkness so that ships can navigate safely. 

The church is that lighthouse. Christ is the light. The world does not need the church to be popular or comfortable. It needs the church to be faithful—to hold the light of Christ steady and true, no matter the cost.

Closing Prayer

Father in heaven, we come before You humbled by the weight of our calling and strengthened by the grace of Your Son. We are Your household, Your family, Your dwelling place. We are the pillar and foundation of truth in a world that desperately needs it.

Remind us that we carry Christ’s presence into the world. May our conduct be a living testimony to His grace, His truth, and His transforming power. May the light of Christ shine through us so brightly that those in darkness are drawn to Him. We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Bible-Presbytrian Church expulsion of bogus and false teachers in FEBC

Understand the biblical and theological framework for such an action.

The Foundation for Action

False teachers reject primary Christian doctrines including the Bible’s divine authority, God’s Trinity, Christ’s deity and humanity, His atoning work and resurrection, and the Holy Spirit’s personality and deity.[1] We can identify them through their evil behavior and treacherous ministry, and by evaluating what they teach about Scripture, God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and salvation.[1]

The Church’s Responsibility

The church separates from false teachers to maintain doctrinal integrity and protect believers from error that inhibits spiritual growth and destroys faith.[2] A church that permits false teaching cannot fulfill its mandate to serve as “the pillar and ground of the truth.”[2]

Critical Safeguards

Separation from false teachers does not involve judging secret hypocrites—only those who openly teach false doctrine.[2] Even while treating false teachers with gentleness, the church must expel them for protection, and expulsion may confront them with truth.[2]

These principles give our church leadership the theological framework they need to respond appropriately to the current circumstances.

[1] Floyd H. Barackman, Practical Christian Theology: Examining the Great Doctrines of the Faith (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic, 2012), 389.

[2] Mark Sidwell, Set Apart: The Nature and Importance of Biblical Separation (Greenville, SC: JourneyForth, 2016). [See here, here, here, here, here.]









Separation and communion

Biblical separation involves distinguishing believers from false teachers and unrepentant members, but the scope and application require careful discernment to avoid schism.

The Grounds for Separation

Scripture establishes three categories requiring separation: separation in personal lives from sin and worldliness, separation of the church from false teachers, and separation from disobedient believers.[1] The church must separate from false teachers whose lives and doctrines distort the gospel[1], while God’s Word calls the church to separate from unrepentant members living in sin or willful error.[1]

The process begins with restoration. When a believer sins, you should address the fault privately; if they listen, you’ve won them over, but if they refuse, involve witnesses, and finally the church itself. (Matt 18:15–17) Those caught in sin should be restored gently by those living by the Spirit. (Gal 6:1) Only after these steps fail does separation become necessary.

Critical Distinctions

The search results emphasize a crucial boundary: A sharp distinction must be drawn between a disorderly brother and a sincere believer who disagrees on interpretation; endless confusion has followed unwarranted separation over minor doctrinal questions, which violates the unity of the Spirit and is foreign to grace.[2]

When separating from someone, the goal is shame leading to repentance, yet you must not regard them as an enemy but warn them as a fellow believer. (2 Thess 3:14–15) Separation is paradoxically “a great work of love, notwithstanding it is looked upon by the unintelligent as an act of hatred.”[3]

Communion with Erring Brethren

The church maintains communion through patient restoration. Believers should warn the idle and disruptive, encourage the disheartened, help the weak, and be patient with everyone. (1 Thess 5:14) Show mercy to those who doubt and save others by snatching them from the fire. (Jude 22–23) Separation occurs only when all corrective measures fail and the person persists in doctrinal error or willful sin—not over secondary matters where sincere believers disagree.

[1] Mike Tatlock and Chris Burnett, Biblical Missions: Principles, Priorities, and Practices (Nashville, TN: Tomas Nelson, 2025), 809.
[2] Lewis Sperry Chafer, Grace (Philadelphia, PA: Sunday School Times Company, 1922), 332–333.
[3] Menno Simons, The Complete Works of Menno Simon (Elkhart, IN: John F. Funk & Brother, 1871), 446.












J. I. Packer

"I swear in the Name of the Triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit that I believe the Bible is none other than the voice of Him that sitteth upon the throne. Every book of it, every chapter of it, every verse of it, every word of it, every syllable of it, every letter of it, is direct utterance of the Most High. The Bible is none other than the Word of God, not some part of it more, some part of it less, but all alike the utterance of Him that sitteth upon the throne, faultless, unerring, supreme."

The above statement is quoted from a sermon preached by J. W. Burgon at Oxford in 1860[1], and it does not specifically refer to the King James Version. Rather, Burgon’s statement is a rhetorical affirmation of the divine origin of all Scripture, affirming the fact of inspiration without discussing the mode of it[1].

What “Bible” Means in This Context

Burgon’s reference to “the Bible” encompasses Scripture as a whole—the original texts and their faithful transmission through history—not a particular translation. Burgon explicitly repudiated the idea that his words advocated a “mechanical theory” of inspiration, stating that “the method of Inspiration is … one of the many things I cannot fully understand, much less pretend to explain”[1]. This clarification is crucial: Burgon believed in divine inspiration of Scripture but rejected rigid theories about how that inspiration functioned.

Important Misunderstandings

The statement has been frequently misappropriated by King James Only advocates. However, what early fundamentalists stood for was the fact of inspiration, not any theory as to the method of it[1]. Burgon himself did not claim the KJV was perfect or that any single translation captured Scripture with absolute precision. His affirmation applied to the original biblical texts and their authoritative content, not to any particular English version.

When Burgon speaks of “every letter,” he means this as a rhetorical expression of Scripture’s comprehensive divine authority, not a literal claim that every letter of every translation is equally authoritative. The statement reflects classical Christian doctrine about biblical inspiration rather than a defense of any specific translation’s perfection.

[1] J. I. Packer, “Fundamentalism” and the Word of God: Some Evangelical Principles (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1958), 179–181.







Drink for the thirsty theologians

 


Luther drank wine daily

Martin Luther embraced wine as a divine gift meant to bring joy and comfort when consumed responsibly, rejecting ascetic abstinence as spiritually harmful.

Wine as Daily Practice and Theology

Luther drank wine daily[1], and he was paid in wine for various services, including his preaching[1]. Rather than viewing wine with suspicion, Luther believed that wine was a wonderful gift of God and could bring a great sense of joy and comfort if drunk in moderation[2]. He composed his famous hymn “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God” while enjoying Rhine wine[1], demonstrating that wine and spiritual creativity coexisted naturally in his life.

Rejecting Prohibitionist Arguments

When voices emerged during the Reformation suggesting Christians should abstain entirely from wine to avoid abuse, Luther vehemently rejected this idea, proclaiming: “Wine and women bring sorrow and heartbreak, they make a fool of many and bring madness, ought we therefore to pour away the wine and kill all the women? Not so. Gold and silver, money and possessions bring much evil among the people, should we therefore throw it all away? If we want to eliminate our closest enemy, the one that is most harmful to us, we would have to kill ourselves. We have no more harmful enemy than our own heart.”[1] Luther’s pastoral insight was significant: he realized the problem does not lie with wine itself but with those who abuse God’s good gifts.[2]

Wine and Christian Freedom

Luther’s desire was to see Christians set free so they could enjoy both God and the gifts that he gives so freely to his children, including wine. He thought that an overemphasis on asceticism and fasting could weaken a human spirit that is already tortured by guilt and shame.[1] Luther insisted that every believer should receive wine in the Lord’s Supper and enjoy it freely as a gift from God.[1] This stance flowed from his conviction that freedom can come only when one knows oneself to be forgiven and loved unconditionally by a merciful God.[1]

[1] Gisela H. Kreglinger, Cup Overflowing: Wine’s Place in Faith, Feasting, and Fellowship (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2024). [See here, here, here, here, here, here, here.]
[2] Gisela H. Kreglinger, The Spirituality of Wine (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2016), 53–54.











John Calvin consumed wine regularly

John Calvin consumed wine regularly and received wine as part of his ministerial compensation.

Wine Consumption and Theology

Calvin celebrated wine and food as gifts from God that bring joy and delight[1], and he wrote in his Institutes that believers have “never been forbidden to laugh, or to be filled, … or to delight in musical harmony, or to drink wine.”[1] Although Calvin condemned drunkenness, he neither preached nor practiced abstinence from wine, and he suggested that three glasses of wine represented the minimum that would overcome weak heads[2]—implying his own capacity exceeded this threshold.

Calvin firmly believed it was unbiblical to forbid drinking wine under the pretext of preventing drunkenness, calling such abstinence an “inhuman philosophy” that deprives people of lawful enjoyment of God’s kindness.[3] He condemned the abuse of wine and upheld moderation as the Christian ideal.[3]

Wine as Wages

Like Luther, Calvin was paid in wine barrels for his sermons and ministry, maintaining a significant wine cellar to provide for his family and extensive hospitality ministry.[1] More specifically, his salary included five hundred liters of wine annually—roughly two bottles a day—intended to supply household needs.[4] Another source records that his pay consisted of fifty dollars, twelve measures of corn, two tuns of wine, and a dwelling-house.[5]

On one occasion when Calvin and Farel visited a wineshop for refreshment, Farel offended him by paying the bill for both.[2] When in decent health, Calvin was excellent company with an abundant flow of brilliant conversation, prompt at repartee, and his circle sometimes rocked with laughter.[2]

[1] Gisela H. Kreglinger, Cup Overflowing: Wine’s Place in Faith, Feasting, and Fellowship (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2024). [See here, here, here.]
[2] Hugh Y. Reyburn, John Calvin: His Life, Letters, and Work (London; New York; Toronto: Hodder and Stoughton, 1914), 329–330.
[3] Gisela H. Kreglinger, The Spirituality of Wine (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2016), 56.
[4] Glenn S. Sunshine, The Reformation for Armchair Theologians, Armchair Theologians Series (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 2005), 132.
[5] Paul Henry and Henry Stebbing, The Life and Times of John Calvin, the Great Reformer (New York: Robert Carter & Brothers, 1851), 269.




























Carl McIntire (1906–2002)

Carl McIntire (1906–2002), a Westminster Theological Seminary graduate, became one of the most prominent and controversial Christian defenders of the twentieth century, expelled from the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) for refusing to resign from the Independent Board of Foreign Missions.[1] His controversies reveal a pattern of theological rigidity and divisive separatism that fractured evangelical unity.

Doctrinal Inflexibility

McIntire’s primary complaints centered on eschatology and Christian liberty, particularly his insistence that premillennialism was non-negotiable despite being acceptable within Reformed traditions, with many of his followers embracing dispensational eschatology instead.[1] This dispensational position contradicted Reformed theology’s teaching of continuity between Old Testament Israel and the New Testament Church.[1] On the alcohol question, McIntire and associate J. Oliver Buswell demanded total abstinence as church policy, but the General Assembly rejected this, upholding the traditional Reformed position condemning drunkenness while affirming moderate drinking.[1]

Extreme Separatism and Institutional Division

McIntire founded the Bible Presbyterian Church, a fundamentalist body with only diluted allegiance to historic Reformed faith.[1] His ruthless insistence on doctrinal purity led him to form the American Council of Christian Churches (1941) and International Council of Christian Churches (1948) to oppose ecumenical movements, but his extreme separatism caused more than three-quarters of his denomination’s hundred churches to disassociate from him in 1956.[2]

Combative Methodology

McIntire published numerous critical articles attacking Billy Graham in his newspaper, the Christian Beacon, and built a long career on rancorous confrontation.[3] He protested Graham’s ecumenical evangelism by standing outside a congress entrance distributing mimeographed tirades against Graham and the evangelism he represented.[3]

The core problem with McIntire’s approach was treating secondary theological matters—eschatological systems and personal practices—as grounds for separation and schism, fragmenting Christian witness through uncompromising rigidity rather than pursuing unity within doctrinal boundaries.

[1] James Edward McGoldrick, Richard Clark Reed, and Thomas Hugh Spence Jr., Presbyterian and Reformed Churches: A Global History (Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2012), 327–328.
[2] D. K. Larsen, “McIntire, Carl,” in Biographical Dictionary of Evangelicals, ed. Timothy Larsen et al. (Leicester, England; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2003), 395.
[3] William Martin, A Prophet with Honor: The Billy Graham Story (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2018), 340–341.



















The core dilemma

We’ve identified a genuine theological tension—one that we address directly. The core dilemma is that God has preserved His Word, but becaus...