All entries by this author
Oct 27th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
In the United States, the Reformed and Lutheran traditions celebrate tomorrow (October 28) as Reformation Sunday, in memory of Martin Luther’s act of nailing his ninety-five theses to the door of the Wittenburg Church on October 31, 1517. The celebration is understandable because that event marks the beginning of the Reformation and of the resulting […]
Tags: Ecumenicism, Schism, Unity
Posted in Blog Posts |
111 comments
Oct 16th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Recently some Protestant participants in the dialogue here raised the objection that grave sins by Catholics seem to be incompatible with the Catholic claim that the Catholic Church is the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. If holiness is one of the four marks of the Catholic Church, how can the Catholic Church contain persons […]
Tags: Ecclesiology, Holiness
Posted in Blog Posts |
37 comments
Sep 26th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Last week the Association of Hebrew Catholics resumed its regular lecture series. The title of this Fall’s series of lecture is “Sacraments: From the Old Covenant to the New.” On September 19, Dr. Lawrence Feingold, Associate Professor of Philosophy & Theology at Kenrick-Glennon Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, and author of The Natural Desire to […]
Tags: Grace, Sacraments
Posted in Blog Posts |
12 comments
Sep 16th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
John Hendryx is a PCA member who studied at Reformed Theological Seminary and owns and edits Monergism.com, a well known Reformed website and online Reformed library and bookstore. He has posted an article claiming that the sixth session of the Council of Trent (AD 1547) is at odds with the Second Council of Orange (AD […]
Tags: Augustine, Grace, Justification, Orange, Soteriology, Trent
Posted in Blog Posts |
26 comments
Sep 5th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Faith can wish to understand because it is moved by love for the One upon whom it has bestowed its consent. Love seeks understanding. It wishes to know ever better the one whom it loves. It “seeks his face,” as Augustine never tires of repeating. Love is the desire for intimate knowledge, so that the […]
Tags: Charity, Love, Truth
Posted in Blog Posts |
25 comments
Aug 3rd, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Nicholas Batzig is a graduate of Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and pastor of New Covenant Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Richmond Hill, Georgia. Nicholas and Anna Batzig Recently he wrote an article titled “The Justification of Imputation,” in which he provides an exegetical argument for the Protestant conception of justification by way of extra nos imputation. […]
Tags: Imputation, Justification
Posted in Blog Posts |
551 comments
Jul 31st, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
In most cases when St. Irenaeus comes up in Protestant-Catholic discussion, the focus is on the papacy, apostolic succession, or the relation of Scripture and Tradition. Here, however, I examine what St. Irenaeus has to say about justification. His teaching on this subject is ecumenically relevant not only because the doctrine of justification was at […]
Tags: Church Fathers, Justification, Soteriology
Posted in Blog Posts |
51 comments
Jul 12th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Ligonier recently posted a lecture by R.C. Sproul titled “A Divided Will?” in which Sproul sets out to present and criticize the Catholic doctrine of original sin and free will.
Tags: Augustine, Calvinism, Free Will, Grace, Justification, Original Sin, Pelagianism
Posted in Blog Posts |
43 comments
Jun 19th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Michael Horton is the editor-in-chief of Modern Reformation, a co-host of the White Horse Inn, and the J. Gresham Machen Professor of Systematic Theology and Apologetics at Westminster Seminary California. Recently he posted three articles responding to the phenomenon of Protestants, and especially Reformed Protestants, coming into full communion with the Catholic Church. In “Did […]
Posted in Blog Posts |
170 comments
May 13th, 2012 |
By Bryan Cross |
Category: Blog Posts
Here I consider two questions. The first question is whether defending the legal recognition of marriage as exclusively between a man and a woman is imposing one’s religious views on others. The second is whether Christians should seek through the political process to maintain or change civil laws.
Tags: Morality, Social Justice
Posted in Blog Posts |
115 comments