Romans 8 declares no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus. The law could not make us righteous, but God's Son did. Explore forensic justification and the believer's security.
Month: December 2025
The Reformation and the Five Solas: What the Reformers Recovered
Discover the five solas of the Protestant Reformation: Sola Scriptura, Sola Fide, Sola Gratia, Solus Christus, and Soli Deo Gloria. Learn what they mean and why they still matter.
Why the Law Was Temporary, Not the Final Solution
The Mosaic Law was a temporary shadow pointing to Christ, not God's permanent plan. Faith has always been the means of righteousness, from Abraham to the cross.
Grace Silences Sin and Brings New Life
Grace does what the law never could: it silences sin, makes worshipers accepted before God, and brings the dead to life. Explore the transforming power of Sola Gratia.
Who Actually Decides Doctrine?
Three competing authorities claim the right to define Christian doctrine: the Church, personal feelings, and Scripture. Only one allows correction from outside ourselves.
The Council of Nicaea: When the Church Defined the Faith
Explore the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD, the Arian controversy, the Nicene Creed, and why this pivotal moment in church history still matters for every Christian today.
It Is Finished: The Contract Fulfilled
When Christ declared 'It is finished,' the eternal contract of sin and redemption was paid in full. Explore the once-for-all atonement and the finished work of the cross.
Protestant vs. Catholic Theology: The Structural Divide
The Reformation divide is structural: justification as finished forensic declaration vs. ongoing sacramental process. Understanding why this difference changes everything.







