Jefferson Vann shares how to build a digital biblical library if all you have is a computer with an Internet connection.
Read MoreUnequivocally, the end of Roe v. Wade is very good. While it does not result in abortion being banned across the United States, it opens that possibility and has obliterated the notion of a national consensus on the morality of abortion…
Read MoreIn “a sinister desolation” Jefferson Vann sheds some Old Testament light on an often misunderstood New Testament text.
Read MoreI have a friend who attended a legalistic Christian School as a child. He once told me about the day when one of his teachers taught a lesson about the possibility of a lost salvation
Read MoreI am sure that you, like me, have been somewhat preoccupied with world events of late. I am not certain if the number of disturbing events is due to the fact that there are more now than (let’s say) two and a half years ago or that we simply have greater access to immediate information and reporting. Of course we have all been impacted by the covid pandemic. Now there is the unjust war on Ukraine by Vladimir Putin and his henchmen that threatens to spill over into Europe. Xi Jinping and China’s Communist Party have been intensifying their threats toward Taiwan. Kim Jong-un keeps cranking out new ballistic nuclear missiles. Then there is the cultural and social unrest here in our own country. Inflation is on the rise and so is horrific gun violence. It seems that the very fabric of our nation is unraveling at breakneck speed. All the political and cultural tension and stress has also made its way into the church. Rather than stand as salt and light, the (evangelical) church (my tribe) seems to have imbibed the heady cocktail of blatant worldliness!
I have come to three settled convictions regarding what I am to do in light of all these overwhelming and seemingly threatening circumstances.
Read MoreTwo institutions contributed to developing the theological and ministry stance of Advent Christian clergy: Aurora College (University) and New England School of Theology (Berkshire Christian College). In Occupy til I Come Susan Palmer…
Read MoreSometimes the realization of some truth crashes over you all at once, like a wave breaking on the shore. Other times it mounts slowly, each piece gathered and joined together like a puzzle, until you finally see the picture…
Read MoreDifficult passages such as Psalm 82 are commonly ignored or dismissed with a badly exegeted interpretation leaving laymen confused when they look at the surrounding context and similar uses of the word elsewhere in scripture; but that’s enough of my ranting. Let’s take a closer look at this issue.
Read MoreI’m not here to rehearse the biblical, theological, historical, and cultural arguments about abortion. Many others have done that far better than myself. The matter that is now front-and-center for Christians like myself is how we follow Christ in a post-Roe context?
Read MoreThe subject of special music in church services is one that I’ve given quite a bit of thought…
Read MoreIt’s been a while since I’ve posted anything on this blog, or on this website. But hopefully I’m now in a position where that can change. Here’s a brief update, and some encouragement for those who are experiencing some “stormy seasons” or “cloudy days.”
Read MoreJefferson Vann shares an article explaining why Paul said that “to die is gain” in Philippians 1:21.
Read MoreIf I were going to invent a religion I would not invent Christianity. The faith, if it were false, would simply be too fraught with philosophical conundrums to be easily foisted off on any targeted worldly audience…
Read MoreIn “Research on my suggested translation of τῶν οὐρανῶν” Jefferson Vann attempts to prove that the Greek phrase can mean “from the sky” and asks for feedback.
Read MoreI was recently befriended by an elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS), and to my absolute joy, our conversations have been the most cordial and friendly of any I have had with an LDS member…
Read MoreCan it really be five years? It is hard to believe that so much time has passed from when I published the first blog post on Advent Christian Voices…
Read MoreA review of Christian literature by David E. Dean, featuring his favorite reads from 2021.
Read MoreHow does one train for godliness? Consider the athlete with whom the Apostle Paul compares the Christian life, “Every athlete exercises self-control in all things. They do it to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable” (1 Corinthians, 9:25).
Read MoreFor some time I have been fascinated by the way the Apostle Paul lays out most of his letters. In a letter like the one he wrote to the Roman believers he lays out the Gospel using the indicative mood. That means that everything he writes from 1:1 to 6:10 is descriptive. There are no imperatives or commands given until 6:11, where he urges his readers to consider themselves to be, by God’s grace in Christ, dead to the rule or dominion of sin. Yet, he really does not give more detailed directives until he comes to 12:1-2.
Therefore, I exhort you, brothers and sisters, by the mercies of God to present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God, which is your reasonable act of worship; and do not be conformed to this age but be transformed by the renewing of your mind for the purpose of you being able to approve what the will of God is, the good, the pleasing and the perfect.
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