Blog

  • Debating the Simple God

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    Debating the Simple God

    In the last few years, few issues have been more controversial among Reformed evangelicals than the debate over the eternal subordination of the Son to the Father. To the extent that God’s intra-triune life has been thought to be the foundation and model of inter-human relationships, many have perceived their various social programs (particularly in…

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  • Vermigli and the Descent Clause

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    Vermigli and the Descent Clause

    If you are like me and many other Christians throughout ecclesiastical history, you, no doubt, have questioned the meaning of the famous (or infamous) descent clause in the Apostles’ Creed: “He [that is, Jesus Christ] descended into hell.”

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  • “What Has Athens to Do With Jerusalem?”

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    “What Has Athens to Do With Jerusalem?”

    Within a month, The Davenant Institute will release an anthology volume entitled Philosophy and the Christian: The Quest for Wisdom in the Light of Christ. Compared to most of our publications, this particular one might seem rather redundant in our day. Hasn’t enough, maybe even too much, already been said? In the last few decades,…

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  • James Ussher and the Reduction of Episcopacy

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    James Ussher and the Reduction of Episcopacy

    One of Ussher’s major contributions to seventeenth-century debates about church government was The Reduction of Episcopacy which was probably composed in early 1641, but not appearing in print until after his death in 1656. This was an attempt to implement his vision of primitive episcopacy in the Church of England and was proposed as a…

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  • Purified by a Principle? Augustine’s Conversion of Neo-Platonism

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    Purified by a Principle? Augustine’s Conversion of Neo-Platonism

    In City of God 10.24, as part of his analysis of and argument with Platonism and Neoplatonism, Augustine takes up the question of mediation–who mediates, and how–questions of some moment in previous and contemporary Platonist demonology, which made use of several levels of divine or semi-divine intermediaries in order to bridge the gap between the…

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  • Distinguishing Before Denouncing: A Review of “Why Liberalism Failed”

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    Distinguishing Before Denouncing: A Review of “Why Liberalism Failed”

    Liberalism has failed. Or so confidently declares Patrick Deneen in his obviously named Why Liberalism Failed. Deneen offers one of the more useful and concise attacks on the often vaporously defined liberalism that has, according to Deneen, plagued modern societies for the last several hundred years. Deneen’s proof of liberalism’s failure is not that it…

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  • “Plainly Diabolical”: Bishop Davenant Weighs in on Clerical Celibacy

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    “Plainly Diabolical”: Bishop Davenant Weighs in on Clerical Celibacy

    John Davenant, as Lady Margaret Professor of Theology at Cambridge, gave a lecture in the 1610’s defending the thesis that: “Thus, marrying in the Sacerdotal Order is lawful, and the decree for its prohibition in the Church of Rome is unlawful, anti-Christian, and plainly diabolical.” In this post, I want to highlight some of the…

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  • Remembering the Importance of Divine Justice–An Update from Dr. Tim Baylor

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    Remembering the Importance of Divine Justice–An Update from Dr. Tim Baylor

    In conjunction with my research on the work of John Owen, the last several months have had me working on a treatise on divine justice authored by Jesuit luminary Francisco Suarez. This work is a very rich and nuanced treatment of a dogmatic topic central to many of the most controversial theological discussions of the…

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  • The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrate in the 21st Century West

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    The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrate in the 21st Century West

    It’s a truism at this point to note that the relationship in the western world between religious doctrine and political theory has become quite tense and uncertain. This is particularly true when we consider the past 3-5 years. As more and more nations have adopted same-sex marriage as the law of the land, this has…

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  • The Inklings Event We Don’t Need… and the One We Do

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    The Inklings Event We Don’t Need… and the One We Do

    Last summer in Oxford England in a pub The Inklings Symposium was conceived. I was an attendee at a conference on C. S. Lewis which shall remain nameless. It was a conference I later came to learn that my friend and fellow Lewis scholar, Jason Lepojarvi, has called a prime example of “Jacksploitation.”

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