Restoring Eve with Guest Kendra Dahl
In this bonus episode of Âé¶čAV, Caleb Wait interviews Kendra Dahl about her article in Modern Reformation, “Restoring Eve.” Listen in as they […]
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In this bonus episode of Âé¶čAV, Caleb Wait interviews Kendra Dahl about her article in Modern Reformation, “Restoring Eve.” Listen in as they […]
Many churches preach that your biggest problem is that youâre not living your best life now. Rather than calling people to repentance, they call them to âtry harder, do betterâ so that they can be fulfilled, healthy, and happy. Reformed theology provides a doctrine to help counter this wrong diagnosis of our true problem: total depravity. But sometimes, this doctrine sounds much more like âutter depravity,â leaving nothing good or redeemable about humanity. In this episode of Âé¶čAV, hosts Michael Horton, Justin Holcomb, and Bob Hiller consider how we hold total depravity in tension with the goodness of humanity.
When we talk about work, itâs easy to jump right to the Fall and consider how work is frustrated by sin. But how does the pre-Fall creation narrative shape our understanding of vocation? And what does that mean for a post-Fall reality? In this episode of Âé¶čAV, Michael Horton, Justin Holcomb, and Bob Hiller are joined by special guest Walter Strickland in a new series examining the doctrine of vocation. This episode looks at the goodness inherent to work, what it looks like toimage God in our vocations, and how the Sabbath shapes our approach to the work week.
Satan is defeated, but heâs clearly still active today. How do we reconcile these two realities? In this episode of Âé¶čAV, Justin Holcomb, […]
Who is the devil? Where does he come from, and how do modern perceptions of him line up with biblical teaching? On this episode of […]
Whenever you watch the news, it becomes increasingly clear that the world isnât the way itâs supposed to be. But how did things go so […]
In the early 1800s, a man by the name of Robert Owen began to challenge the concept of original sin. âNone are or can be […]
As a boy, I once encountered a book that had hidden messages on its pages. Using ordinary eyesight, the printed words remained invisible. But once I looked […]
Bestselling author Richard Rohr has argued in his writings that the concept of original sin âwas first put forth by Augustine in the fifth century […]
In his letter to the Galatians, Paul warns believers about the dangers of turning away to alternative gospels, even if theyâre found on the lips […]
In Ephesians 4:17, Paul says that Christians âmust no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds.â In this insightful passage, […]
How should we think about sin and repentance in a life of Christian discipleship? Do Christians continue to struggle with sin or is it possible […]