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A Second Look at Lying and the Ethics of the New Christian Right

Part 1 of 2 Not long ago, Ben Crenshaw—Contributing Editor at American Reformer—suggested in an article that deception is sometimes commendable. The claim was incidental to the larger point of the article in question, but Carl Trueman—Professor of Biblical & Religious Studies at Grove City College—took issue with it in an article of his own….

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Shepherd of the Sheep – The Second Sunday after Easter

This entry is part 28 of 59 in the series A Walk in the Ancient Western Lectionary

A Walk in the Ancient Western LectionaryA Walk in the Ancient Western Lectionary: An Introduction Come Thou Long Expected Jesus – The First Sunday in Advent Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending – Second Sunday in Advent On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist Cries – Third Sunday in Advent O Come, O Come, Emmanuel – The…

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A History of Alternative Views of Hell in the Church of England

Introduction A serious study of what was taught in centuries past will always reveal a greater diversity of thought than is popularly claimed, for the past continually falls victim to generalizations. Sometimes the majority view is innocently mistaken to be the only one, other times minority views are ignored for the purpose of giving an…

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An Occasion for Comment

The Draft Book of Occasional Offices The ACNA Book of Common Prayer (2019) Resource page posted the draft version of the ACNA Book of Occasional Offices (2026) for downloading, review, and comments. According to the webpage, comments and suggestions can be sent: “Before April 5 (Easter Day) 2026, please email the Rev’d Jacob Hootman at…

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Book Review: “Let’s Call It Home”

Let’s Call It Home: Poems. By Luke Harvey. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2024. xii + 98 pp. $26.00 (hardback), $11.00 (paper). Let’s Call it Home is a tidy volume of contemporary poetry by Luke Harvey, containing seventy-five poems divided into three sections: Lullabies of Ascent, Spiritus Vertiginis, and Returning Home. Together these sections trace a…

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No Quarter – The First Sunday after Easter

This entry is part 27 of 59 in the series A Walk in the Ancient Western Lectionary

A Walk in the Ancient Western LectionaryA Walk in the Ancient Western Lectionary: An Introduction Come Thou Long Expected Jesus – The First Sunday in Advent Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending – Second Sunday in Advent On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist Cries – Third Sunday in Advent O Come, O Come, Emmanuel – The…

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An Anglican Layman Looks at Women’s Ordination

The Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) has been wrestling with the issue of women’s ordination for the past decade. The worldwide Anglican Communion has been actively wrestling with this issue for five decades. For a variety of complex reasons, some we will explore in this essay, the church has failed to resolve this issue….

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The Making of a Murderer

The Role of Natural Revelation in the Story of Cain and Abel It is difficult to overstate the profundity of the story of Cain and Abel that is told in the space of just a few verses in Genesis 4. With a strict economy of detail, we are told a story that is incredibly dark…

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The Logic Underpinning the Eucharist, Continued [Commentary on Browne: Article XXIX]

Little space is typically devoted to expositing Article XXIX because, as Browne and many other commentators have noted, “if the last Article be true, this most probably follows on it.” If “by faith we are enabled to receive Him,” then “the wicked,” who are “void of a lively faith,” will of course be unable to…

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Meat and Potatoes

Rightly Handling the Word of Truth in Its Internal Variance of Texture & Taste Your words were found, and I ate them, And your words became to me a joy and the delight of my heart, For I am called by your name, O Lord, God of hosts. (Jeremiah 15:16) There is a Scripturally warranted…

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