Entries by Administrator (3)
Adult Sunday School Classes
January through July 2008
Objections Overruled: Answering Challenges to Historic Christianity (Kenneth R. Samples)
With the rise of militant Islam, a growing defense of so-called 'Gnostic Christianity,' and the emergence of the new atheism, the veracity of historic Christianity is consistently questioned in today's world. This series will address a variety of challenging questions including the following:
1. If God Created All Things, Then Who Created God?2. Doesn’t Evolution Make God Unnecessary?
3. Isn’t Belief in God just Psychological Wishful Thinking?
4. Doesn’t the Bible Condone Slavery?
5. How Can the God of the Bible be Loving and Command Genocide?
6. Didn’t Christianity Borrow From Other Religions and Philosophies?
High School and Children's Sunday School Classes
The high school and children's Sunday school classes meet at 9:00 a.m. each week.
High School — Mr. Nate Taylor
Jr. High School — Mr. Larry Alwag
Elementary Grades 4-6 — Mr. Mark Russell
Elementary Grades 1-3 — Mr. Matthew Robinson
3 ½-5 year olds — Mrs. Charlotte Anderson
If you have any questions, please contact Mrs. Charlotte Anderson
Director of the children’s Sunday school
Adult Sunday School on June 22 and 29
The Reverend Andrew Compton will be teaching the following class on June 22 and 29.
Gospel Centered Piety: Grace and Gratitude in First Peter
This is a short exegetical, theological, and historical survey of First Peter. We'll see how Peter encourages a persecuted church to live in the freedom that was irrevocably granted to them by Jesus Christ. We'll also see how Peter masterfully weaves together comfort and exhortation so that his readers will not fall into either license or legalism.
Joel Beeke, Overcoming the World: Grace to Win the Daily Battle. P&R Publishing, 2005. I alluded to part two, "Overcoming the World through Piety: Calvin's Answer to Worldliness," although the entire book is helpful.
Samuel Bolton, The True Bounds of Christian Freedom. The Banner of Truth Trust, 2001. This is a little book in the "Puritan Paperbacks" series.
Jerry Bridges, Respectable Sins: Confronting the Sins We Tolerate. NavPress Publishing, 2007. This book was recommended to me by another pastor. I referred to it when describing how Christians tend to get very passionate about theological errors and larger social problems while tolerating a host of seemingly "smaller" sins.
Give Praise to God: A Vision for Reforming Worship - Celebrating the Legacy of James Montgomery Boice. P&R Publishing, 2003. This volume is edited by Philip Ryken, Derek Thomas, and Ligon Duncan, and contains a few chapters that I cited. The chapters are "Private Worship," by Donald S. Whitney; "A Call to Family Worship," by Ligon Duncan and Terry Johnson; and "Worship and the Emotions," by W. Robert Godfrey. The volume also contains excellent contributions by Edmund Clowney, Albert Mohler Jr., Mark Dever, Paul Jones, and Michael Horton, to name just a few.
John Piper, Desiring God: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist. Multnomah Books, 2003. The volume published in 2003 is the revised and expanded edition. I noted that Piper helps us to wrestle with how it is that the Psalmist and other Biblical writers can speak of delighting in God, specifically in his law and his word.
Richard Sibbes, Glorious Freedom: The Excellency of the Gospel Above the Law. The Banner of Truth Trust, 2000. Also in the "Puritan Paperbacks" series. Sibbes shows how the beauty of the gospel frees Christians to delight in godliness and gratitude.
R.C. Sproul, Pleasing God. Tyndale House Publishers, 1994. Sproul's own "gospel centered" approach to sanctification and the pursuit of Godliness.
Paul Tripp, Age of Opportunity: A Biblical Guide to Parenting Teens. P&R Publishing. This is written from a similar perspective as the next book (by Tedd Tripp), but now with the aim of helping parents of teenagers.
Tedd Tripp, Shepherding A Child's Heart. Shepherd's Press, 1995. A wonderfully practical and incredibly important guide for parents. Though teaching children to obey their parents in nothing less than behavior modification, Tripp notes that it is much more; it is about cultivating a heart of Godliness in one's children. I'm convinced that all Christians, even those without children, would do well to read this book!
B.B. Warfield, The Religious Life of Theological Students. P&R Publishing. Warfield masterfully shows how there ought to never be a dichotomy between "spiritual" and "academic" exercises in our theological studies. While primarily written with seminary students in mind, this little pamphlet is applicable to all (clergy and laity alike) who are students of theology.
