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Critical Theory – Part 1

An episode of the The Gospel for Life podcast, hosted by Josh Bales, Russell Herman, Phil Moran, Jonathan Van Hoogen, titled "Critical Theory – Part 1" was published on June 3, 2021 and runs 13 minutes.

June 3, 2021 ·13m · The Gospel for Life

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Episode Summary On this episode of The Gospel For Life, the Pastors discuss the biggest threat to the church today: critical theory. You can still register for the upcoming Reformation Boise Conference on their website today! About Gospel for Life Four Treasure Valley pastors – all committed to showing that the Gospel is not just […]For more information about this group, please visit their website at reformationboise.com. Every weekday at 3:30 am and 7:30 am you can listen to The Gospel for ...

Episode Summary On this episode of The Gospel For Life, the Pastors discuss the biggest threat to the church today: critical theory. You can still register for the upcoming Reformation Boise Conference on their website today! About Gospel for Life Four Treasure Valley pastors – all committed to showing that the Gospel is not just […]

For more information about this group, please visit their website at reformationboise.com.
Every weekday at 3:30 am and 7:30 am you can listen to The Gospel for Life on KSPD 94.5 FM and 790 AM Boise's Solid Talk in the Treasure Valley,  Idaho, USA.

If you have a question, comment, or even a topic suggestion for the Pastors, you can email them. 

Phone: (208) 991-3526
E-mail: [email protected]
Podcast website: 
https://www.790kspd.com/gospel-for-life/

Together For Good Together For Good Dan and Melodie Griffin provide a fresh voice and new perspective on the challenges and opportunities for life and marriage presented by current surroundings through their podcast, Together for Good. Dan and Melodie blend their experiences and expertise to challenge married people to build great marriages that translate the Gospel so everyone around them understand the love of Jesus. The Deeper Christian Life Andrew Murray If you were put on trial for being a Christian, would you be convicted? Christians have asked themselves this question, or ones like it, for millennia. In his book, The Deeper Christian Life, Andrew Murray helps us come to grips with those nagging insecurities in our Christian walk. A shallow relationship with God leads us down a road of doubt and insecurities. Can I be forgiven? How can I forgive? Murray tells us that we can go deeper in our relationship with God, and with that deeper relationship comes growing confidence and joy in the gospel. That joy springs from the knowledge of God's grace in forgiving us, and enables us to extend that grace to others in our lives. (Summary from the introduction) The Directory of the Devout Life Frederick Brotherton Meyer We can never allow the great objective facts of Christianity, and their attendant doctrines, to sink low on our horizon; but we must give equal prominence to the demands of Christ for a righteousness which shall exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees, and a perfection which shall resemble that of God. We have no right to be content with saying "Lord, Lord;" we must do the things which He says. Of course, the right kind of obedience is impossible, apart from the Cross and the Spirit. We must be reconciled before we can become obedient children; we must be filled with the Spirit before "the fragrance of Christ" can be manifested through us in every place. The Sermon on the Mount must be read in the transfiguring light which shines backwards from the later events in our Lord's life. When, however, this is borne in mind, each sentence of that marvelous discourse glistens with celestial radiance, and rings with the music of the Gospel. In such a spirit let us Life of Jesus Critically Examined, The by David Friedrich Strauss (1808 - 1874) LibriVox Strauss was an early pioneer in the ongoing 'Quest of the Historical Jesus' movement, and his Life of Jesus is one of the few landmarks in the field. The first edition of Strauss' book was published in Germany in 1835, when he was only 27 years old. He focused his attention on battling two theological fronts which were current at the time - the biblical Literalists who believed the miracles in the Gospels were to be taken as literal history, and the Rationalists, who believed that the Gospel miracles were true but could be explained by natural and rational causes. Strauss rejected both camps and, in a historical analysis of the Gospels that was scrupulous and exhaustive, concluded that our knowledge of the Historical Jesus is hopelessly buried under layers of legend and myth.The price that Strauss paid for publication was high – his book scandalized Europe, and cost him his job as Chair of Theology at the University of Zurich, and ultimately his career. Dozens of books, mos
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