God’s Vision for the Church, Pt. 1 (Church Theology, Ep. 3)

In this episode Kirk and Dan continue their series on the concept of a “Church Theology” by digging into God’s Biblical vision for the church. In the last two episodes we saw how God views the church, how he sees it. But now, what is God’s vision for the church — his desire for it and plan as it were to embody its calling and live out its mission?

Access the episode here (available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and more).

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God’s View of the Church, Pt. 2 (Church Theology, Ep. 2)

Kirk and Dan continue their discussion on God’s view of the church by now asking, “How does God’s view of the church affect our own? And what does this mean for us practically when we adopt God’s view?”

Access the episode here (available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and more).

See all other episodes in this series.

God’s View of the Church, Pt. 1 (Church Theology, Ep. 1)

Church Theology is a podcast “on the church for the church.” As such, we thought it’d be helpful to start off our podcast with an introduction series on that very idea of “church theology.” We begin here in this episode by looking at the church, specifically God’s view of the church and how that view should shape our own. In future episodes in this series we plan to look at God’s vision for the church as well as the importance of the church’s theology in living out that vision.

Access the episode here (available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and more).

See all other episodes in this series.

The Importance of Sound Doctrine

The Importance of Sound Doctrine
CrossWay Community Church
September 8th, 2019

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Podcast link.

Jonathan Edwards’ Definition of Saving Faith

“Practice is the most proper evidence of trusting in Christ for salvation. The proper signification of the word trust, according to the more ordinary use of it, both in common speech and in the Holy Scriptures, is the emboldening and encouragement of a person’s mind, to run some venture in practice, or in something that he does, on the credit of another’s sufficiency and faithfulness. And therefore the proper evidence of his trusting, is the venture he runs in what he does. He is not properly said to run any venture in a dependence on any thing, who does nothing on that dependence, or whose practice is no otherwise than if he had no dependence. For a man to run a venture in dependence on another, is for him to do something from that dependence, by which he seems to expose himself, and which he would not do were it not for that dependence. And therefore it is in complying with the difficulties and seeming dangers of christian practice, in a dependence on Christ’s sufficiency and faithfulness to bestow eternal life, that persons are said to venture themselves upon Christ, and trust in him for happiness and life. They depend on such promises as that, Matt. 10:39. ‘He that loseth his life for my sake shall find it.’ And so they part with all, and venture their all, in a dependence on Christ’s sufficiency and truth. And this is the scripture notion of trusting in Christ, in the exercise of a saving faith in him. Thus Abraham, the father of believers, trusted in Christ, and by faith forsook his own country, in a reliance on the covenant of grace which God established with him, Heb. 11:8, 9.”

~ Jonathan Edwards, Religious Affections, III.XIV.