Avoiding the Hermeneutical Trap of Arminianism: Part 1 – A Look at John 3:16-17

By Mark W. Christy, PhD (This series has been adapted from several sermons that covered verses relied upon by Arminians to defend their stance. In order to properly undergird their position, the Arminians are tasked with finding clear biblical support for the human will being an active part (and therefore, completely free and beyond the control of God’s sovereign will) of the salvation process. If this can be accomplished, then they must, of necessity, engage the verses that appear to direct...
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Honest Doubt

Mark W. Christy, PhD According to the Apostle James, “the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind. For that man ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord, being a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways” (1:6b-8).[i] From these words, it would seem that doubt is something that all believers should avoid, and the Scriptures offer multiple accounts of God’s people struggling with doubt. This list of those doubting includes notables su...
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The Heaping of Burning Coals: A Look at Romans 12:20

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In Romans 12:20, Paul issues this command, “But if your enemy is hungry, feed him, and if he is thirsty, give him a drink; for in so doing you will heap burning coals on his head.” Those who have sought to correctly discern Paul’s directive have often struggled with what he means by “heap burning coals on his head.” While some have suggested Paul means that loving one’s enemy will cause the enemy to feel ashamed, this view hardly accords with the context and the usage...
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How Did Jesus Fulfill the Law and the Prophets in Matthew 5:17?

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In Matthew 5:17, Jesus announces, “Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish but to fulfill.” Some who have contemplated on His meaning sometimes believe Him to be saying that His intent was to preserve the Old Testament (OT) even while He adds to it. Others see “fulfill” to somehow be connected with an Aramaic word, qûm, that means to establish, validate, and confirm. Assuming this connection, this group of translators arg...
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Is Wrath Only to be Associated with God and not Christ?

By Mark W. Christy, PhD Unfortunately, many who come into contact with Scripture (in one way or another) often perceive the Old Testament (OT) to be portraying a wrathful God, while the New Testament (NT), so they think, portrays Jesus as a loving God who abounds in grace and is markedly different than the God of the OT. If one employs a cursory glance at both Testaments, one will likely agree. Afterall and unlike the NT, the OT has many accounts that speak of God’s overt, temporal, and publ...
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The Greatest Commandment and How to Follow It

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In Mark 12:29-30, Jesus declares the greatest commandment: “The Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.”[i] Here, Jesus makes clear that one’s entire devotion should be wholly focused on God who has revealed Himself in unified wholeness. Because of His oneness, people are called upon to worship Him with an undivided loyalty that consumes their entire...
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Does God Hate the Sin but Love the Sinner?

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In the ever-growing theological vacuum that continues to engulf the present era, many herald God’s omnibenevolence in such a way that God is proclaimed to be unibenevolent. In other words, they perceive of God’s love as the overarching characteristic which subsumes any other aspects of His being. For them, the love of God is so completely indiscriminate that even hardened sinners have little need to fear. So common is their view of God’s love that many affirmatively r...
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The Identity of the Chosen Lady in 2 John in Refutation with John MacArthur

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In his second letter, the Apostle John directly addresses his message “to the chosen lady and her children” (v.1).[i] As to the identity of this lady, many scholars suggest that John is referring to a specific local church where he had been serving as an elder. Others believe that John is referring to a specific lady. One scholar, John MacArthur, though he affirmed the first view early on in his ministry, has now conceded to the second.[ii] To assess the merits of Mac...
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The Proper Way to Identify False Prophets: A Hermeneutical Study of 1 John 4:2

By Mark W. Christy, PhD In 1 John 4:2, the Apostle offers a way to test whether or not a person should be numbered among those who are false prophets. He writes, “every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God.”[i] His bold assertion, however, calls into question those who label many prominent members of the evangelical community as false teachers, given that most of these teachers affirm Christ’s incarnation. To resolve this apparent dilemma, this article wi...
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Upon What Rock Does Christ Build His Church: Peter, the Faith Confession, or Both

By Mark W. Christy In Matthew 16:16-18, the following exchange between Peter and Jesus is recorded: “Simon Peter answered, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” And Jesus said to him, “Blessed are you, Simon Barjona, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My Father who is in heaven. I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not overpower it.””[i] Among Roman Catholics, these verses are viewed as cl...
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