Jun 18, 2026

Deceptive spiritual forces and demonic teachings

Paul warns that the Spirit explicitly declares that in the latter times, certain individuals will desert Christian faith by pursuing deceptive spiritual forces and demonic teachings. (1 Tim 4:1–5) This defection represents not mere intellectual disagreement but spiritual rebellion—a deliberate turning away from revealed truth toward darkness.

The Mechanism of Deception

These false teachings arrive through individuals whose moral conscience has been deadened, rendering them incapable of recognizing truth. (1 Tim 4:1–5) The deception operates through human agents who have become vessels for spiritual opposition. Satan himself disguises himself as an angel of light, and it should not surprise us that his servants likewise masquerade as servants of righteousness. (2 Cor 11:13–15) This camouflage makes deception particularly dangerous—false teachers appear legitimate and trustworthy.

The Content of Demonic Teaching

The specific false teachings Paul addresses forbid marriage and demand abstinence from certain foods (1 Tim 4:1–5)—practices that reject God’s created order. Everything God created is good, and nothing should be rejected when received with thanksgiving, because it is sanctified through God’s word and prayer. (1 Tim 4:1–5) Demonic doctrine typically distorts God’s design by either condemning what He permits or permitting what He forbids.

Why People Abandon Faith

The time arrives when people refuse sound doctrine and instead gather teachers who tell them what their desires want to hear. (2 Tim 4:3–4) People perish because they refused to love the truth and therefore be saved. (2 Thess 2:3–12) Abandonment of faith stems from a fundamental rejection of truth itself—a choice rooted in preference for deception over reality.

The Call to Vigilance

Believers must not believe every spiritual claim but test the spirits to determine whether they originate from God. (1 John 4:1–3) Savage wolves will infiltrate the flock, and even from within the church, some will distort truth to draw disciples after themselves. (Acts 20:28–31) Spiritual discernment becomes essential protection against deception.



Live At Peace With All Men

Living at peace with all people requires both a transformed heart and deliberate relational practices grounded in Scripture’s vision of reconciliation.

The Foundation: Inner Peace and Right Motivation

Peace begins internally when “the peace of Christ rules in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace.” (Col 3:15) This inner tranquility becomes the source from which peaceful relationships flow. Heavenly wisdom is “first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.” (James 3:17–18) Rather than reacting defensively or seeking vindication, believers cultivate a disposition oriented toward reconciliation.

The Commitment: Intentional Effort

Paul’s instruction is clear: “If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.” (Rom 12:18) This acknowledges a hard reality—not all conflict lies within your control. Yet you remain responsible for your portion. Believers must “turn from evil and do good; they must seek peace and pursue it,” (1 Pet 3:11) treating peacemaking as an active pursuit rather than a passive hope.

The Practice: Concrete Actions

When relationships fracture, if “you remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to them; then come and offer your gift.” (Matt 5:23–24) Reconciliation takes priority over ritual.

Toward those who oppose you, do not repay evil for evil, but “overcome evil with good.” (Rom 12:17–21) Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, (Matt 5:38–48) mirroring God’s impartiality. Let your gentleness be evident to all. (Phil 4:5)

The Promise: Blessing and God’s Presence

Peacemakers are “blessed” and “will be called children of God.” (Matt 5:9) Those who “sow in peace reap a harvest of righteousness.” (James 3:17–18) When you “strive for full restoration, encourage one another, be of one mind, live in peace,” the “God of love and peace will be with you.” (2 Cor 13:11)



Holding Forth the Word of Life (Philippians 2:16)

Paul’s exhortation to “hold firmly to the word of life” emerges from a broader vision of Christian witness that transforms believers into beacons of divine truth in a spiritually darkened world.

The Context of Radiant Witness

Paul instructs the Philippians to live without complaining or quarreling so they become blameless and pure, shining “like stars in the sky as you hold firmly to the word of life.” (Phil 2:14–16) This imagery connects to a fundamental biblical pattern: believers embody God’s redemptive message through both their character and their proclamation. God has made “his light shine in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of God’s glory displayed in the face of Christ,” (2 Cor 4:6) establishing that Christians carry Christ’s illuminating presence into their communities.

The Dynamic of Holding Forth

“Holding forth” involves more than passive possession—it means actively presenting, offering, and displaying the word of life to others. Just as a lamp placed on a stand “gives light to everyone in the house,” believers must “let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.” (Matt 5:14–16) The word of life becomes visible through both testimony and transformed living. Having been transformed from darkness into light, believers must “live as children of light (for the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth).” (Eph 5:8–11)

The Missional Dimension

This practice reflects the Church’s fundamental calling. Believers are “a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.” (1 Pet 2:9) When Paul speaks of holding forth the word of life, he envisions believers becoming living witnesses whose integrity and proclamation together advance God’s redemptive purposes. Paul’s confidence rests on this reality: faithful witness ensures that his labor “did not run or labor in vain.” (Phil 2:14–16)



KJV-onlyism

About KJV-onlyism, we reveal significant problems with this position both historically and theologically.

Historical Inaccuracy

Belief in the KJV’s superiority is a relatively recent position in fundamentalist circles and goes well beyond historic fundamentalism’s core commitments.[1] Fundamentalism has always emphasized God’s Word as final authority, but that authority was never tied to a particular Bible translation.[1] The KJV-only movement began earnestly in the latter half of the twentieth century and gained significant momentum only around the mid-1970s.[1] The quoted statement presents as orthodox doctrine what is actually a modern innovation.

Theological Problems

The statement conflates translation quality with divine inspiration in problematic ways. Some argue the underlying Greek and Hebrew texts (the Textus Receptus) were supernaturally preserved or inspired, while leaving open the possibility of a better translation than the KJV itself.[2] However, claiming the KJV is “the Word of God” elevates a translation to a status traditionally reserved for the original manuscripts—a category error that confuses the medium with the message.

Translation Theory Issues

It is impossible to be consistently literal in translation.[3] Every translation requires choices about word order, grammatical equivalence, and contextual meaning that cannot be mechanically resolved. The KJV itself is a pleasing-but-not-perfect blend of formal and functional translation, with its translators deliberately refusing perfect consistency, saying that insisting on such uniformity would “savour more of curiosity than wisdom.”[3]

Internal Divisions

There is no unified KJV-only movement, with nearly as many variations of the position as defenders who have written to support it.[1] The statement presents certainty where the movement itself exhibits profound disagreement about its own foundations.

[1] Jeffrey P. Straub, “Fundamentalism and the King James Version: How a Venerable English Translation Became a Litmus Test for Orthodoxy,” Southern Baptist Journal of Theology Volume 15, ed. R. Albert Mohler (2011), 15:4:53–54.
[2] James R. White, The King James Only Controversy: Can You Trust Modern Translations? (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House, 2009), 25.
[3] Mark Ward, “Word Nerd: Language and the Bible,” Bible Study Magazine (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press; Faithlife, 2021), 14:1:64.
















The Westcott and Hort text

The Westcott and Hort text emerged from the collaborative work of two British scholars who published their critical Greek New Testament in 1881, based on thorough examination of the earliest and most reliable manuscripts.[1]

Methodological Foundation

The scholars developed what they called the “Neutral Text” theory, proposing that Codex Vaticanus and Codex Sinaiticus (along with a few other early manuscripts) most closely replicated the original writing.[2] They distinguished four principal text types: the Western (characterized by paraphrasing and interpolation), the Neutral (preserving the original form best), the Alexandrian (purer than Western but tending to polish language), and the Syrian (the latest, mixed form).[3] They regarded Codex Vaticanus as preeminent for textual purity, and treated the combined readings of Vaticanus and Sinaiticus as generally deserving acceptance.[3]

Historical Significance

Their work was historically significant in dethroning reliance on the Textus Receptus.[2] While new discoveries—especially papyri—led modern critics to abandon Westcott and Hort’s historical reconstruction of the text’s development, their methodology proved so sound that these same discoveries essentially confirmed their edition of the text, and virtually all fundamental progress since has built upon their foundation.[4]

Modern Assessment

The Westcott and Hort text remains extremely reliable.[5] However, some scholars believe they gave too much weight to Codex Vaticanus alone.[5] Recent papyri discoveries have affirmed their view that Vaticanus and Sinaiticus represent a primitive Greek text form, though they would have altered some textual choices based on papyri evidence—particularly regarding their theory of “Western noninterpolations” in Luke 22–24.[5]

[1] Edward Andrews, How We Got the Bible (Cambridge, OH: Christian Publishing House, 2023). [See here.]
[2] Philip W. Comfort, New Testament Text and Translation Commentary: Commentary on the Variant Readings of the Ancient New Testament Manuscripts and How They Relate to the Major English Translations (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2008), xxv.
[3] Samuel Macauley Jackson, ed., in The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (New York; London: Funk & Wagnalls, 1908–1914), 2:110.
[4] David Alan Black and David S. Dockery, Interpreting the New Testament: Essays on Methods and Issues (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2001), 54.
[5] Philip Comfort, Encountering the Manuscripts: An Introduction to New Testament Paleography & Textual Criticism (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman, 2005), 100.
































Christian Biblical counseling

Christian Biblical counseling is fundamentally distinct from secular psychology because it grounds all helping relationships in Scripture and Christ-centered transformation rather than human wisdom alone.

At its core, Christian counseling involves one person helping another recognize, understand, and solve problems according to God’s Word.[1] However, the local church body shares responsibility for ministering to members’ emotional needs, making congregational resources integral to the counseling process.[1]

The approach rests on several essential biblical convictions. Without Christ, people are spiritually lost[1]—a reality that shapes the entire counseling relationship. Ignoring a counselee’s eternal destiny while addressing present problems is fundamentally illogical.[1] Additionally, people without Christ are incomplete, lacking the deepest comfort and most powerful resource for solving problems—Jesus Christ himself.[1] When someone trusts Christ as Savior, the Holy Spirit indwells, empowers, guides, teaches, and frees them, making God’s own resources available for living and coping with difficulties.[1]

Biblical counseling relies on truths from God’s Word as the foundation for wise counsel.[2] Christ-centered counseling provides advice, encouragement, and hope grounded in biblical truth while depending on Christ to produce genuine change.[2] This distinguishes it sharply from approaches that treat psychological problems in isolation from spiritual reality.

Theologically, Christian counselors must embody the grace-shaped redemptive quality reflecting God’s disposition toward humans, becoming God’s incarnation for clients as Christ is for all humanity.[3] The counselor’s authenticity—both professional competence and spiritual integrity—becomes the vehicle through which biblical truth transforms lives.

[1] Frank Minirth, The Minirth Guide for Christian Counselors (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2003), 1, 4.
[2] June Hunt, Counseling Through Your Bible Handbook: Providing Biblical Hope and Practical Help for 50 Everyday Problems (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2008), 14.
[3] J. H. Ellens, “Counseling and Psychotherapy: Theological Themes,” in Baker Encyclopedia of Psychology & Counseling, ed. David G. Benner and Peter C. Hill (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1999), 280.


















The creation days

The question of whether creation occurred in literal days versus figurative periods remains genuinely contested among evangelical scholars, with thoughtful interpreters holding different positions.

The Case for Literal Days

Arguments supporting a literal interpretation include the narrative’s overall feel, the phrase “evening and morning,” the fact that humans imitate God’s 6/1 work pattern in Sabbath observance, and the observation that the plural “days” in Exodus 20:11 never refers to anything other than literal days.[1] The literal interpretation sees Genesis 1 as clearly describing six 24-hour days.[2]

The Case for Figurative Interpretation

However, the first three “days” occur without the sun and moon to mark day and night, opening the possibility that “day” was not meant literally.[2] Genesis 2:5 suggests that natural processes were occurring during the creation week, which would not seem to make sense if the account is literal.[1] Figurative interpretations include viewing each day as a long period of time, as a day in which truths were revealed to Moses, or as the “framework hypothesis,” where the narrative is poetic and visionary rather than chronological, presenting six different “pictures” of creation.[1]

The Gap Theory Explained

The gap theory, sometimes called ruin-restoration creationism, proposes an unknown gap of time between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2. After God’s initial creation, Satan rebelled and God pronounced judgment upon the once-perfect earth, bringing about the chaotic conditions described in Genesis 1:2. Beginning in Genesis 1:3, God transformed the earth back into order.[3] This theory emerged when eighteenth and nineteenth-century scientific discoveries in geology, astronomy, and paleontology suggested an old earth, raising the question of how to harmonize this with six literal creation days.[4]

Critical Assessment

The Hebrew verb “hayah” in Genesis 1:2 stands in the completed perfect tense and describes no movement or development, making the translation “became” unlikely, suggesting the gap theory imposes too much on the biblical text.[5] The Church does not require Christians to believe either that the universe came to be in six literal days or that it did not.[6] Many respected theologians—Augustine, Anselm, Hodge, Warfield, Machen—have held figurative views, and traditionally American Presbyterians have accepted a wide variety of interpretations.[1]

[1] John M. Frame, The Collected Shorter Theological Writings (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2008). [See here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here.]
[2] Douglas Mangum, Miles Custis, and Wendy Widder, Genesis 1–11, Logos Research Commentaries (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2026). [See here, here.]
[3] Kenneth D. Keathley and Mark F. Rooker, 40 Questions about Creation and Evolution, ed. Benjamin L. Merkle, 40 Questions Series (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic, 2014), 111.
[4] John S. Feinberg, No One Like Him: The Doctrine of God, The Foundations of Evangelical Theology (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2001), 584.
[5] William C. Williams, “In the Beginning,” in They Spoke from God: A Survey of the Old Testament, ed. William C. Williams and Stanley M. Horton (Springfield, MO: Gospel Publishing House; Logion Press, 2003), 86.
[6] Scott Hahn, ed., in Catholic Bible Dictionary (New York; London; Toronto; Sydney; Auckland: Doubleday, 2009), 177.
































Hyper-Calvinism

Hyper-Calvinism is an exaggerated or imbalanced type of Reformed theology, historically associated with Strict and Particular Baptists of English origin and Dutch-American Reformed groups.[1] Originating in the 18th century before the Evangelical revival, it has always represented a minority theological position, with its adherents today being extremely few.[1]

The core problem with hyper-Calvinism lies in how it distorts the relationship between God’s sovereignty and human responsibility. It attempts to exalt God’s honor and glory by severely minimizing the moral and spiritual responsibility of sinners.[1] More specifically, it makes no meaningful distinction between God’s secret will and his revealed will, thereby deducing the duty of sinners from God’s secret decrees.[1]

Two particularly damaging theological errors emerge from this framework. The first is eternal justification—the belief that the covenant of grace is so secure, built on God’s election, that the elect are viewed as justified from eternity, which leads to the conclusion that there is no biblical warrant to call sinners to faith since God has already eternally decreed they would have faith.[2] Yet Jesus and the apostles regularly called sinners to believe, and Paul’s exposition shows that faith is the means by which a person experiences God’s blessing and without which no one is justified.[2]

The second error is antinomianism—the belief that since Christ bore the penalty of sin and perfectly fulfilled the law for the elect, Christians are not required to obey his moral law.[2]

Practically, hyper-Calvinism denies the free offer of the gospel[3] and holds that evangelism is not necessary.[4] Charles Spurgeon rebuffed this approach, proving that gospel invitations were universal for everyone and that preachers must call all listeners to repentance and faith.[2] The movement remains theologically marginal within Reformed Christianity.

[1] Sinclair B. Ferguson and J.I. Packer, in New Dictionary of Theology (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 324.
[2] Shawn D. Wright, 40 Questions About Calvinism, ed. Benjamin L. Merkle, 40 Questions Series (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic, 2020), 232–233.
[3] C. D. Daniel, “Hyper-Calvinism,” in New Dictionary of Theology: Historical and Systematic, ed. Martin Davie et al. (London; Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press; InterVarsity Press, 2016), 432.
[4] Thomas J. Nettles, By His Grace and for His Glory: A Historical, Theological and Practical Study of the Doctrines of Grace in Baptist Life (Cape Coral, FL: Founders Press, 2006), 424.


Premillennialism

Premillennialism encompasses several distinct views unified by the conviction that Christ’s return will initiate an intermediate stage in which he reigns fully over the present, sin-cursed form of the cosmos[1]. However, premillennialists diverge significantly on how Christ’s return relates to the tribulation and the rapture.

Core Premillennial Framework

Premillennialists differ among themselves about whether Jesus Christ’s first advent inaugurated God’s kingdom, with many earlier dispensationalists emphasizing that Israel rejected Jesus’s offer of the kingdom, while others more recently have embraced inaugurated eschatology where Jesus already brought God’s kingdom in his first advent, although the fullness of that reign is not yet realized[1]. Typically, but not necessarily, this intermediate reign involves a literal one thousand years that fulfills Old Testament promises to Israel and corresponds to Revelation 20[1].

Variations on Tribulation Timing

The major distinctions center on when believers experience the tribulation. The posttribulational view sees the rapture as part of Christ’s return when he comes to inaugurate the millennium, so the rapture happens after the “tribulation,” and God preserves Christians through this distress rather than removing them from the earth[1]. The midtribulational view sees the rapture taking believers away before God’s wrath comes at the middle of the tribulation period, treating biblical passages with “time, times, and half a time” as dividing the tribulation into two three-and-a-half-year halves, with believers enduring some earthly suffering before God removes them[1]. The pretribulational view sees Christian believers being kept away from and out of God’s wrath, so believers are raptured before the tribulation begins because the entire period contains God’s wrath[1]. The prewrath view positions the rapture right before the portion of the tribulation in which God actively pours out wrath at the unfolding of the very last days, agreeing that God’s people will not remain on earth during the direct outpouring of divine wrath, with only the last part of the tribulation containing this wrath[1].

Historic Premillennialism

Historic premillennialists believe that Christ will return to the earth to establish a 1000-year reign of righteousness followed by the new heaven and new earth, with the next event in God’s prophetic plan being the return of Christ which could be at any time, understanding tribulation to describe the suffering state of the church rather than a future 7-year period[2].

[1] Daniel J. Treier, Introducing Evangelical Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2019), 346–348.
[2] Glenn R. Kreider, “Eschatology,” in The Harvest Handbook of Bible Prophecy, ed. Ed Hindson, Mark Hitchcock, and Tim LaHaye (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2020), 110.












The five points of Calvinism

The five points of Calvinism possess both considerable theological strengths and significant vulnerabilities that merit careful examination.

Strengths of the Five Points

The five points represent one of Calvinism’s most important theological contributions, effectively defending Calvinist soteriology in its most contested areas.[1] They aim to give God the glory due to Him as sovereign Redeemer while strengthening believers and enabling them to walk in righteousness.[2] When rightly explained, TULIP ably sets forth Calvinist soteriology and defends it against critics and Arminian theology.[1] Additionally, Calvinism is actually the most loving theology possible, for it is a theology of grace[1]—contrary to common caricatures.

Weaknesses of the Acronym and Formulation

The TULIP acronym has weak points: it rearranges the order of the Canons of Dort and simplifies them, with the canons saying a great deal more than TULIP represents, and saying it with more vitality and in a better order.[1] Even Calvinists don’t agree among themselves on the finer points of their doctrine, and the average person has difficulty understanding the arcane maze of theology that Calvinism represents.[3]

Terminological Concerns

Some prefer alternative terminology: “radical depravity” instead of “total depravity,” “sovereign election” rather than “unconditional election,” “definite atonement” over “limited atonement,” “efficacious grace” instead of “irresistible grace,” and “perseverance of God” rather than “perseverance of the saints.”[1] If wording needed changing, “definite atonement” would be preferable to “limited atonement” to avoid misunderstanding.[1]

Doctrinal Criticisms

Critics argue that Calvinism misrepresents God’s love, decrees, sovereignty, will, grace, nature, character, knowledge, foreknowledge, gospel, and His Word.[3] Limited Atonement is particularly controversial—a doctrine even some Calvinists reject.[3]

The framework’s strength lies in its systematic defense of divine sovereignty; its weakness stems from oversimplification and terminological imprecision that invites misunderstanding.

[1] Joel R. Beeke, Living for God’s Glory: An Introduction to Calvinism (Lake Mary, FL: Reformation Trust Publishing, 2008), 50–51.
[2] Roger Nicole, Our Sovereign Saviour (Fearn, Ross-shire, UK: Christian Focus Publications, 2002), 47.
[3] Laurence M. Vance, “A Review of Dave Hunt’s What Love Is This? Calvinism’s Misrepresentation of God,” Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Volume 15 (2002), 15:29:42–43.




















Biblical separation and Christian unity

Biblical separation and Christian unity operate in genuine tension, yet they’re not contradictory when properly understood. The key lies in recognizing what each principle actually demands.

The Bible unquestionably issues a call to Christian unity in tension with the call to separation.[1] However, unity Christ prays for in John 17 is restricted to believers, and the unity commanded must be of the same nature as the unity between the Father and the Son—only those regenerated by the Holy Spirit and brought into union with the Father through Christ can enjoy this kind of unity.[1] This means Christian unity is fundamentally spiritual and doctrinal, not organizational or indiscriminate.

The critical insight is that the question of unity must never be put first, but always remember the order stated in Acts 2:42, where fellowship follows doctrine.[1] Separation protects this doctrinal foundation. Separation is essential to holiness and is the basic idea in sanctification.[2] Ecclesiastical separation is the repudiation, as to Christian fellowship and cooperation, of those guilty of heresy, schism, or open sin and disobedience.[2]

Yet separation must be practiced with discernment and love. In separation, believers must act according to the principle of love, but Christian love is not weak sentimentality—biblical love is to be informed, discerning, and discriminating, manifested in love for God that rejects the world system, love for the church that will not tolerate false teachers, and love for fellow Christians willing to endure a break in fellowship to provoke them to do right.[1]

Critically, separation is God’s answer to apostasy and to disobedient brethren who will not separate from apostasy, but separation is not the answer to every disagreement between brethren.[1] The balance requires maturity: maintaining doctrinal boundaries while refusing vindictiveness, avoiding extremism that separates over personal preferences, and remembering that true unity flows from shared submission to Christ and His truth.

[1] Mark Sidwell, Set Apart: The Nature and Importance of Biblical Separation (Greenville, SC: JourneyForth, 2016). [See here, here, here, here, here, here, here.]
[2] Alan Cairns, in Dictionary of Theological Terms (Belfast; Greenville, SC: Ambassador Emerald International, 2002), 414.












Church government

Based on Paul’s charge to the Ephesian elders and related passages, suitable church governance rests on a leadership structure combining pastoral oversight with shared responsibility and accountability to God.

The foundational model involves multiple elders with distinct roles. Paul summoned the elders from Ephesus and instructed them that the Holy Spirit had appointed them as overseers (bishop) to shepherd the church of God (Acts 20:17–35). The terms “elder,” “overseer (bishop),” and “pastor” describe the same office from different angles—elder emphasizing maturity, overseer emphasizing responsibility, and pastor emphasizing care. Churches included both overseers (bishop) and deacons (Phil 1:1), suggesting a two-tier structure where elders provide spiritual direction while deacons handle practical matters.

Qualifications matter profoundly. Rather than seeking prominence, leadership demands character: overseers must be above reproach, faithful in marriage, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, and capable of managing their own families well (1 Tim 3:1–13). Elders must hold firmly to trustworthy doctrine to encourage others and refute opposition (Titus 1:5–9). These standards protect the church from self-serving or incompetent leadership.

The leadership style emphasizes servant-hood over authority. Elders should shepherd the flock willingly, not from compulsion or dishonest gain, and avoid lording authority over those entrusted to them, instead becoming examples to the flock (1 Pet 5:1–4). This contrasts sharply with worldly power-seeking—pastoral authority exists to serve, not dominate.

Accountability flows both directions. Church members should submit to leaders who keep watch over them as those accountable to God (Heb 13:17), yet elders who direct church affairs well deserve honor, especially those engaged in preaching and teaching (1 Tim 5:17). This mutual accountability prevents both congregational rebellion and pastoral tyranny.

The model emphasizes plurality and shared responsibility rather than single-leader governance, ensuring no individual wields unchecked power and distributing the burden of spiritual care across mature believers committed to Christ’s mission.



Jesus’s resurrection

The Gospels present Jesus’s resurrection as a physical, bodily event rather than merely a spiritual or symbolic one. An angel rolled back the stone from the tomb, and announced that Jesus “has risen, just as he said.” (Matt 28) The women found the stone rolled away and discovered the body of the Lord Jesus was no longer there. (Luke 24) Early on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene found that the stone had been removed from the tomb’s entrance. (John 20–21)

The nature of the resurrection body combined continuity with transformation. Christ rose bodily from the dead—not a resurrection of “influence” or “spirit,” but a physical, bodily resurrection.[1] The disciples felt and saw His bodily characteristics, and He demonstrated physical functions when He ate with them.[1] Yet the resurrection body was different in that it was not subject to normal limitations—He could pass through closed doors, and most importantly, He cannot die ever again.[1]

The resurrection occurred on the third day and was followed by multiple appearances. Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, was buried, and was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures. (1 Cor 15:3–8) He appeared to more than five hundred believers at once, then to James, then to all the apostles. (1 Cor 15:3–8) After His suffering, He presented Himself with many convincing proofs that He was alive, appearing over a period of forty days and speaking about the kingdom of God. (Acts 1:3–11)

Theologically, Christ’s resurrection overcame death so believers might share in the righteousness He won through His death; by His power believers are already now resurrected to new life; and Christ’s resurrection guarantees our glorious resurrection.[2] If Jesus had not risen from the dead, His victory would be an illusion, His message meaningless, and redemptive history would end in a grave—the resurrection may be called the major premise of early Christian faith.[2]

[1] Charles Caldwell Ryrie, A Survey of Bible Doctrine (Chicago: Moody Press, 1972). [See here, here, here.]
[2] Gordon R. Lewis and Bruce A. Demarest, Integrative Theology: Our Primary Need: Christ’s Atoning Provisions, Integrative Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1990), 2:449–450.












The Virgin birth

The virgin birth refers to Jesus’s conception through the Holy Spirit rather than through normal human reproduction, with Mary remaining a virgin at the time of his conception. (Matt 1:18–25; Luke 1:26–38) According to Matthew’s account, an angel assured Joseph that “what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit.” (Matt 1:18–25) When Mary asked how this could occur since she was a virgin, the angel responded that “the Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.” (Luke 1:26–38)

The theological significance of this doctrine centers on two critical affirmations about Jesus’s identity. The virgin birth guaranteed Jesus’s sinlessness, since the work of the Holy Spirit ensured he was born without sin.[1] Because all humans inherit sin through Adam, Jesus needed to come as “the second man, the last Adam” to begin a new humanity.[1] For Jesus to function as the world’s Savior, he had to be fully human yet without sin—a problem the virgin birth solves.[1]

Beyond sinlessness, the doctrine addressed two opposing heresies: it affirmed Jesus’s genuine humanity against those denying it, and his true divinity against those claiming he was merely human, expressing both divine grace and God’s self-limitation.[2] From Christianity’s earliest centuries, the virgin birth became foundational to high Christology, with church fathers emphasizing it as proof of the incarnation and Christ’s deity.[3] The doctrine functions as a living symbol of Christ’s twofold nature—born of the Holy Spirit and of a woman—uniting the human and divine in the incarnate God-man.[3]

[1] A. T. B. McGowan, Cdhp: Person and Work of Christ (Crownhill, Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2012). [See here, here, here, here.]
[2] Joel B. Green, “Virgin Birth,” in The New Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible, ed. Katharine Doob Sakenfeld (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 2006–2009), 5:791.
[3] Walter A. Elwell and Barry J. Beitzel, “Virgin Birth of Jesus,” in Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1988), 2:2126.




















The Scripture

Christian belief in Scripture rests on three foundational convictions: that it is divinely inspired, absolutely authoritative, and entirely trustworthy.

Scripture, though written by human authors, has God as its ultimate author and can be understood as coming from God, as His very words.[1] All of Scripture is inspired, and the original autograph volume of inspiration was free from error.[2] This doctrine, known as plenary inspiration, means that Scripture is infallible truth, free from all error; each and everything contained in it is absolute truth, whether doctrine, morals, history, chronology, topography, or proper names.[2] Importantly, not every sentence contains a truth—for example, Satan’s words to Eve were falsehood—but those words were actually spoken and are recorded with infallible accuracy.[2]

The authority of Scripture flows directly from its divine origin. Scripture possesses the right to command what Christians are to believe, do, and be, and to prohibit what they are not to believe, do, and be.[3] At issue is the nature and extent of the motivating control that canonical Scripture should exercise over the doctrine, discipline and devotion of the church and its members.[4] Submission to Scripture is one aspect of submission to Christ.[4]

The Reformation crystallized this conviction through the principle of sola Scriptura. The Reformers asserted Scripture’s necessity (only biblically taught notions of God will be true), sufficiency (all that needs to be known for godliness and salvation is displayed in the Bible), and clarity (the canonical books exhibit their unity and build up their message from within, so Scripture interprets Scripture).[4] This framework protects Christian faith from human speculation, tradition, and imposed interpretations that lack biblical support.

[1] Gary Derickson, An Exegetical Theology of 1–3 John (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2017). [See here.]
[2] William Greenough Thayer Shedd, Dogmatic Theology, ed. Alan W. Gomes (Phillipsburg, NJ: P & R Pub., 2003), 91.
[3] Gregg R. Allison, 50 Core Truths of the Christian Faith: A Guide to Understanding and Teaching Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2018), 23.
[4] J. I. Packer, “Scripture,” in New Dictionary of Theology: Historical and Systematic, ed. Martin Davie et al. (London; Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press; InterVarsity Press, 2016), 824.





















The Christian Gospel

The Christian Gospel centers on Jesus Christ and the divine plan of redemption fulfilled in his life, death, resurrection and renewal of creation[1]. At its heart lies a transformative message about God’s initiative toward humanity.

The gospel is the good news that God became man in Jesus Christ. He lived the life we should have lived and died the death we should have died—in our place. Three days later He rose from the dead, proving that He is the Son of God and offering the gift of salvation and forgiveness of sins to those who repent and believe in Him.[2] This represents a fundamental distinction from other world religions: most religions of the world call men to ascend and work their way to God. Christianity explains that God came down to us.[2]

The Gospel addresses humanity’s condition through grace rather than human achievement. Every human since then has been a sinner, and all have fallen short of God’s glory[3], yet God so loved the world that he sent his Son Jesus—who was himself fully God and fully human—as the Savior, the sacrifice, the ransom, and the propitiation for sins.[3] Salvation comes not through personal effort but through faith: it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God (Eph 2:8–9).

The Gospel’s scope extends beyond individual conversion. Growing theological appreciation of the link between gospel and kingdom over the past century or so has led most Christian bodies to articulate a broader understanding which relates the gospel to social justice, communal well-being and ecological stewardship, as well as to personal salvation.[1] Yet what has not altered, and cannot alter, is that the gospel is personified and centred in the Lord Jesus Christ.[1]

Biblical passages affirming the Gospel message: God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16) (John 3:16). Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures (1 Cor 15:3–4) (1 Corinthians 15:3–4). If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved (Rom 10:9–10) (Romans 10:9).

[1] D. H. K. Hilborn, “Gospel,” in New Dictionary of Theology: Historical and Systematic, ed. Martin Davie et al. (London; Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press; InterVarsity Press, 2016), 374–375.
[2] Rice Broocks, The Human Right: To Know Jesus Christ & to Make Him Known (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2023), 29–30.
[3] Charles (Chuck) E. Lawless, “Theology, Evangelism, and Missions,” in Theology, Church, and Ministry: A Handbook for Theological Education (B&H, 2017), 358.


















Deceptive spiritual forces and demonic teachings

Paul warns that the Spirit explicitly declares that in the latter times, certain individuals will desert Christian faith by pursuing decepti...