Walking With God
Henry Scudder (1584–1659) defines what it is to walk with God, describes its characteristics and various evidences it produces, and gives reasons why walking with God is essential to those who are called by His name.
Henry Scudder (1584–1659) defines what it is to walk with God, describes its characteristics and various evidences it produces, and gives reasons why walking with God is essential to those who are called by His name.
R.C. Sproul (1939–2017) argues that it is a moral duty for a woman to cover her head during public worship, and to do otherwise is to violate a biblical principle and sin against God.
John Murray (1898–1975) expounds upon the meaning of Mark 2:27-28 regarding the lordship of Christ over the Sabbath.
John Bunyan (1628–1688) defines and exposes the nature of a true hypocrite—one who appears to be something in men's eyes but who is in fact nothing in the sight of God.
John Bunyan exhorts Christians to keep the Lord's Day holy, attend to public worship with due reverence, maintain a studious Christian life, and diligently start and end each day with serious reflection.
John Calvin (1509–1564) explains why the Roman Catholic mass is far more abominable to God than the abuses of the Lord's Supper of which the Corinthians were guilty.
The Council of Trent (1545–1563) represents the Roman Catholic Church's official position against Protestantism. It has never been revoked and is confirmed both by the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) and the official Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992). Perusing its canons will reveal that the…
Andrew Murray was a proponent of the Higher Life Movement and ultimately Pentecostalism, the former of which was written against by B.B. Warfield and J.C. Ryle.
Dr. Voddie Baucham in a Facebook post has published the following list of serious deviations from Christian orthodoxy and Christian standards of morality maintained by Martin Luther King, Jr.