What is essential to the gospel, according to Luke? Part 5
“Look, I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!”
“Look, I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!”
The apostles testify to God the creator and his holy servant Jesus.
Peter and John address the Jewish leadership.
An apostolic account of what is truly essential to the gospel.
What must you sign off on, to make the deal?
What must I do, or what must I believe, to be saved?
Is “the doctrine of the Trinity” essential to salvation? To Christianity?
“I had come to this belief truly just through studying the Word.”
“In essentials, unity; in non-essentials liberty; in all things, love.” So far, so good. But, what does Scripture say is essential teaching about Christ and about God?
Who needs the Bible when you can gesture at some philosophical speculations?
Is it the foundational commitment of biblical unitarians that Scripture must be inoffensive to human reason?
“The Gospel is Trinitarian.” What does this mean, and is it both true and non-trivial?
A conversation with the author of the Paideia John commentary on Jesus and God in the fourth gospel.
A discussion about the fourth gospel with the author of this unique commentary on it.
Dr. Bob Cargill of the University of Iowa reviews The Lost Gospel by Simcha Jacobovici and Barrie Wilson. In his view, it’s a stink-bomb of a Christmas present. In part (emphases added) Just don’t bother. Were it a Dan Brown-esque novel, positing a speculative interpretation about the relationship between Jesus and Mary Magdalene utilizing a fanciful allegorical interpretation of a document written six centuries after Jesus… Read More »The Lost Gospel – Not Lost, and Not a Gospel!
Do Matthew, Mark, and Luke discreetly but clearly imply that Jesus is God?
An interview by Dustin of The DustinMartyr Blog – it’s McInteresting! …the early Christian apologists, such as Justin Martyr, were not arguing about monotheism with their Jewish contemporaries. They were arguing over whether Jesus was the Messiah, and whether certain things can be said about this man who was crucified, and things like that. But we don’t find monotheism as the topic. For me, the… Read More »James McGrath on the Gospel of John and Christology
Some friendly disagreements about the prodigal son, women in Luke, and the deity of Christ in Luke.
The first ever Jewish and Christian commentary on a biblical book.
Why no mention of Incarnation in the birth narratives of Matthew and Luke?