Recent Comments
- Carolanne WrightExtremely HelpfulThank you for your well-researched clarification on this issue. Having noticed the ESV (and other modern translations) use parenthesis for the passage, whereas the Trinitarian Bible Society KJV does not, your explanation is very helpful.
- Mark ThorntonGreat Sermon!Amen!
- B. McCauslandBeneficial considerations
- B. McCauslandVery edifying SermonEnriching teaching of the Word. Thank you
- B. McCauslandExcellentThank you for this.Very helpful
- Van LoomisGreat Sermon!Just like Abel in Hebrews 11, though David is dead, he still speaks. By God's providence I have been introduced to this precious man of God after he went to be with the Lord. Through the limited things I have come across (this interview, a sermon, some written things), he has been a great influence on me to increase in my love for the Lord. He was "a good servant of Christ" (1 Tim. 4:6).
- B. McCauslandText criticism exposedThe truth will make people free
- B. McCauslandPositive and very interestingVery helpful to hear Mr. Mehrshahi's sound approach, and experiences while witnessing to Muslems, with his Persian background. Thank you, may God bless you.
- B. McCauslandGreat ScholarshipMr. Riddle's knowledge on the matter is greatly appreciated.
- B. McCauslandUseful historical knowledge
- B. McCauslandUseful seriesVery thankful for men as Mr Ridle who painstickingly bring apart the fallacies of those that "speak great swelling words" of vanity and deceit to the subverting of their hearers, whose months may God stop.
- B. McCauslandA literal millennium refutated as errorVery interesting to read about Dionysius of Antioch's refutation of a literal millenium as an error in the early church. This interpretation had been taught by Nepos, an Egyptian bishop, causing great division of the churches near Alexandria. As it often happens with other modern trends of interpretation, some errors are not new.
- B. McCauslandInformative sectionHowever one ponders why the early church had to 'celebrate' a passover in the first place? It is obvious that as early as the first and second century Christians were seduced into the observance of not commanded special events, which perpetuated for many centuries after. This demostrate how early error gripped the church from its very beginnings.
- B. McCauslandHelpful clues to understand Origen's deviations
- B. McCauslandSection of special interestThese are informative chapters in Eusebius records about the leaders of the early churches in Antioch, Jerusalem, Bostra, and Rome, and about the ongoing discussions about the Pascha, against the claims of the Papacy and Easter.