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Salve for the Evangelical Soul

In recent years there have been numerous books, almost a nascent genre, in which disaffected or "enlightened" evangelicals share how they were wounded by their childhood faith and have now outgrown it. I am always amazed when the new insights and startling breakthroughs shared in these books are things that the wider church has practiced for centuries. More amazing is how evangelical readers, who have largely ignored the historic church, seem so eager to receive the condemnation and kicks from…
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Beyond Funny

What's going on these days with Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert? As many readers know, these two men are, respectively, the hosts of the Comedy Central programs The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. Both are "fake" news shows and both contain just enough bleeped-out language and sexual innuendo to offend a good many Christians. Mr. Colbert began working under Stewart in the early years of The Daily Show, eventually morphing himself into a faux arch-conservative who played off of…
January 11, 2011
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Marilynne Robinson: Distinctive Calvinist

Calvinists come in many stripes and colors. There are five-point Calvinists, who may believe they originated with Calvin, but actually owe more to the Canons of Dort; Westminster Calvinists who adhere more to the Westminster standards than Calvin; neo- Calvinists who find their inspiration in the theologies of Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck; and neo-Orthodox Calvinists who are closer to Karl Barth than Calvin. And then there is Marilynne Robinson, a self-confessed Calvinist, whose Calvinism is not simply distinctive; it…
I. John Hesselink
January 1, 2011
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One Living Body

With the new year, we begin a new series, "Not My Own: Reflections on the Heidelberg." We have asked various authors to share a time or memory when the beloved Heidelberg Catechism became more significant and personally poignant, an experience that was illumined as the words of the Catechism shone upon it. In the months ahead, we hope to hear a variety of voices express how the Heidelberg shaped and touched them. One Living Body by Allan Janssen Question 75.…
Allan Janssen
January 1, 2011
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The Fruit of Discord

There are many markers of our ecumenical age, from official dialogue among Roman Catholics, Lutherans, and Reformed to a US President of Protestant faith honoring graduates of the University of Notre Dame. In such a promising and cooperative time dare we look back to the Reformation era, when things first fell apart, when dogmatism, intolerance, and violence shattered Christian unity? Should Calvin and historic Reformed voices be heralded again, voices that excoriated idolatrous images, warped worship, and other "abominations of…
J. Jeffrey Tyler
January 1, 2011
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Sarah’s Ordination Sermon: The Cloud and the Glory

Sarah DeYoung Brouwer was baptized on a beautiful spring day in Central Pennsylvania. At only three or maybe it was four months of age, she had no idea what was happening to her. But her parents knew. By presenting Sarah for baptism we believed that we were giving to her the most precious gift that we could think of to give her. Not as expensive as a college education, but more precious. At the time, I was very new to…
Douglas J. Brouwer
January 1, 2011
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Good Sermons

Have you heard any good sermons lately? Many people answer, "No." If you are dissatisfied with the quality of preaching that you hear, you may be listening for the wrong thing. Here are some suggestions. Observe Paul's example. The Apostle Paul was a gifted speaker but by his own admission, he deliberately preached dull sermons. He explained that he tried to avoid "eloquent wisdom so that the cross of Christ might not be emptied of its power." (1 Corinthians 1:17)…
Edward H. Schreur
January 1, 2011
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Time: A Non-Renewable Resource

I recently came across a letter I wrote to my wife as I was beginning my fiveyear prison sentence. There in my tiny little cell at the county jail, awaiting the terrifying uncertainties of the years ahead, I was learning just what old convicts mean when they say, "Do your time. Don't let your time do you." Here's an excerpt: My mind just won't quiet down. I keep pacing the room, laying down, getting up again. I tried sleeping some…
Johnathan Kana
December 16, 2010
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Tribute to Jim Bratt

Among all of us who are currently members of the Perspectives editorial team and board, no one can recall an edition of the magazine or a board meeting that did not involve Jim Bratt. Since 1998 Jim has worked at most every level of the operation, including as one of the main editors across the last half-dozen years. In short Jim has been involved with Perspectives for most of the years since this journal joined forces with the former Reformed…
December 1, 2010
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Tree Hugger!

Here's a statement I hear rather frequently where I live and work: "Well, of course, I'm no 'tree hugger,' but..." and then follows a mild expression of concern about some part of the creation. For many people in my part of the country, being known as a "tree hugger" is a shameful thing. I'm not sure why they feel this way, but I suspect it grows out of a fear of being identified with people--"radicals"--who have chained themselves to old…
Dave Schelhaas
December 1, 2010