Most religious systems operate on moral causality: effort determines destiny. Christianity rejects that framework. Salvation rests not on accumulated merit but on the imputed righteousness of Christ.
Can You Define God into Existence? The Ontological Argument Explained
Can you define God into existence? Explore the Ontological Argument — one of the most provocative proofs for God’s existence — and discover why this philosophical masterpiece still challenges thinkers today.
The Kingdom in Their Midst: Luke 17:20-21 and the Present Reign of Christ
When the Pharisees asked Jesus when the kingdom of God would come, He told them it was already among them. An examination of Luke 17:20–21 and the inaugurated kingdom—what the Pharisees missed, why it matters today, and the already-not-yet framework that makes sense of it all.
That He Might Be Called a Nazarene: Matthew 2:23 and the Search for the Prophecy
Matthew 2:23 claims Jesus fulfilled a prophecy by being called a Nazarene, yet no Old Testament verse says this. Examining the Branch hypothesis, the despised Messiah theme, and what Matthew actually meant.
Three Christian Views of the End Times Explained Clearly
Christians agree that Christ is coming again. They disagree on the tribulation, the rapture, and the Millennium. Pre-trib, post-trib, and amillennial frameworks explained clearly.
Righteousness Without Applause
Jesus exposes two economies of reward in Matthew 6:3-4. Righteousness performed for applause is paid in full. Only faith sustains obedience practiced for God alone.
Commit Tomorrow to God, Attend to Today
We borrow tomorrow's anxieties to erode today's joys. Christ commanded us to live in the day God has given. Commit the unknown future to Him and attend faithfully to the present.
Covenant Prayer, Not Anxious Pleading
Biblical prayer is not bargaining with an unpredictable deity. It is covenant appeal to a God who binds Himself by promise and cannot lie. Discover the Reformed covenantal basis for confident prayer.







