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The Costly Path to Glory

Jerry Foltz - Mark

An episode of the Second Reformed Presbyterian Church podcast, hosted by Jerry Foltz, titled "The Costly Path to Glory" was published on April 27, 2025 and runs 43 minutes.

April 27, 2025 ·43m · Second Reformed Presbyterian Church

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1. Follow Jesus by confessing Who He truly is. 2. Follow Jesus by embracing why He came. 3. Follow Jesus by walking the same road. 4. Follow Jesus in hope of what's to come.
Second Christian Reformed Church Second Christian Reformed Church Sermon audio given each Sunday at Pella 2 CRC in Pella, IA. Second CRC of Kalamazoo Second Christian Reformed Church The messages from the morning and evening services at Second Christian Reformed Church of Kalamazoo, MI. The Senior Pastor is Rev. John Bothof. Westminster's Confession: The Abandonment of Van Til's Legacy - Reconstructionist Radio (Audiobook) Gary North In October 1990, the long-promised book by the faculty of Westminster Theological Seminary finally appeared: Theonomy: A Reformed Critique. This book is North’s two-pronged response. First, he takes up the major essays and themes of the Westminster faculty’s critique/interaction with theonomy and provides clarifications and rejoinders. Second, he argues that Westminster has abandoned the apologetic theory of Cornelius Van Til, which maintains that between the believer and the unbeliever all ground is common ground, but no ground is neutral ground. No neutral ground means that every square inch of life is claimed by Christ, including law, civil government and social ethics. No neutral ground means that the Bible must be the ultimate authority in every sphere of life. The Westminster faculty has abandoned Van Til, substituting various versions of “neutral” natural law theory. The faculty has not openly faced up to the question: “If not Van Til’s philosophy, what?” This is a production of Bible (ASV) NT 20: James by American Standard Version LibriVox The Epistle of James is a book in the Christian New Testament. The author identifies himself as James (James 1:1), traditionally understood as James the Just, the brother of Jesus, first of the Seventy Disciples and first Bishop of Jerusalem. With no overriding theme, the text condemns various sins and calls on Christians to be patient while awaiting the imminent Second Coming. The epistle has caused controversy: Protestant reformer Martin Luther argued that it was not the work of an apostle. Roman Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Mormonism claim it contradicts Luther's doctrine of justification through faith alone (Sola fide) derived from his translation of Romans 3:28. The Christian debate over Justification is still unsettled, see also Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification and Christian view of the Law. (Summary from Wikipedia)
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