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Joshua Against Pacifism

Violence, Young Men, and the Culture War When St. Dunstan’s Academy considered naming our program for high school graduates after Moses’s longtime apprentice and eventual successor, Joshua, we had some reservations. The book of Joshua is one of the most controversial in the Bible, thanks to a brutal conquest narrative that one could accurately, if…

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Knowing God: A Classic Rediscovered

Knowing God. By J. I. Packer. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2023. 400 pp. $29.99 (hardcover). Thanks to the Colson Fellows Program, I read Knowing God by the late great Rev. Dr. J.I. Packer for the first time. I knew about Packer’s work, but never encountered it at a bookstore or had someone personally recommend it to…

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For A Distinctive Anglican Way

In The Pastoral Use of the Prayer Book by the Rt. Rev. William Paret (1826-1911), the once bishop of Maryland tells his young clergy and postulants they should be asking themselves this question: “How am I going to act, what am I going to do in the service and pastoral work which are before me?”[1]…

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Atonement is Cosmic Reconciliation

Atonement, Justice, and Divine Hospitality We’ve been arguing about who’s in the lifeboat, when the atonement was about calming the whole storm. In other words, Christ’s atonement is about more than who gets in and out of heaven; it’s about the whole cosmos. These reflections came to me over the last few months as I…

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Protecting the Rights of the Unborn

Abortion is the issue of our time. Children are being terminated in record numbers, and liberal news outlets, democrat institutions, and academia are fighting to promote the pro-abortion agenda. Conservative activists need to make their voices heard. Roe v. Wade: the Fallout Roe v. Wade extended privacy rights to abortion to the point of viability…

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A Practical Shift on Receiving in Both Kinds [Commentary on Browne: Article XXX]

Browne identifies the practice of communing using only the bread and withholding the wine from the laity as another outgrowth of Roman Catholic eucharistic doctrine: “The doctrine of transubstantiation naturally led to the belief that, inasmuch as the elements were wholly changed into the substance of Christ, therefore whole Christ, Body and Blood, was contained…

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