Satan boasts of leading leaders astray the salting the lie with truth. But he met his match - and a terrible portent of things to come - in the prophet Asaph.
Patrick was falsely charged with greediness and seeking personal gain from his ministry. He has a word or two to say about that in Part 9 of Celtic Flame: The Burden of Patrick.
Satan's boldest and most consistent efforts to turn the hearts of people away from God has been by corrupting worship. He tells us all about it in Part 8 of Satan Bound.
What is preaching? And what is preaching for? 18th century poet and hymnodist William Cowper had some thoughts on those questions, and we begin to review them in Part 1 of "An Essay on Preaching."
We take a break from The Westminster Confession of Faith to consider one of most important and most neglected doctrines of Scripture: The ascension and session of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Patrick continues explaining why the demands of ministry would not allow him to return to Britain to answer some spurious charge against him by jealous bishops.
What makes The Iliad a classic? What can we as Christians learn from this epic tragedy? We begin the first of a three-part series investigating these questions in this week's InVerse Theology Project.
Life under the sun is vanity because it all ends in the grave. If that's all we have to hope for, well, that's not very hopeful. Solomon has a better suggestion in Ecclesiastes 9.