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The Apostle Paul on Friendship
By: Sam Storms
The Apostle Paul on Friendship
By: Sam Storms
3 Myths about Friendship (1) The first myth is that cultivating close, intimate friendships is primarily, if not exclusively, for weak and immature people who are emotionally needy; friendship exists only for those who need to have their sagging spirits bolstered; only for people with feelings of insecurity. Does that sound like Paul to you? (2) The second myth is that friendship is for those who a...Read More ➔
The Filling and Anointing of the Holy Spirit - Part I
By: Sam Storms
The Filling and Anointing of the Holy Spirit - Part I
By: Sam Storms
We must begin by distinguishing between baptism in the Holy Spirit and the filling of the Holy Spirit: 1) Spirit-baptism is a metaphor that describes our reception of the HS at the moment of our conversion to Jesus in faith and repentance. When we believe and are justified, we are, as it were, deluged and engulfed by the HS; we are, as it were, immersed in and saturated by the Spirit. Results: a) we...Read More ➔
The Filling and Anointing of the Holy Spirit - Part II
By: Sam Storms
The Filling and Anointing of the Holy Spirit - Part II
By: Sam Storms
It is common for believers to experience post-conversion encounters or experienceswith the Holy Spirit that are related to but not identical with infilling: a) The impartation of revelatory insight and illumination into the blessings of salvation. See Eph. 1:15-23. See Isa. 11:2. The point is that "Paul is herewith praying that God will gift them with the Spirit yet once more, and that the Spirit in...Read More ➔
The Healing Ministry of Jesus
By: Sam Storms
The Healing Ministry of Jesus
By: Sam Storms
Jesus the Healer Luke 4:38-41 Here are 12 principles that reveal the nature of healing in the ministry of Jesus and the importance he placed on it. 1. Jesus healed hundreds, if not thousands, of people. See especially Mt. 4:23-24. Some have argued that Jesus healed only a "few dozen" (Philip Yancey), whereas the gospels indicate that he healed multitudes. Healing was a common feature of his earthly minist...Read More ➔
The Image of God in Man
By: Sam Storms
The Image of God in Man
By: Sam Storms
Humanity in the Image of God There are a number of textual indicators in Genesis 1-2 that point to the special significance of the creation of male and female in the image of God (I'm indebted to Bruce Ware for these observations): It is only after God has created man that he says of all he has made: it is "very good" (1:31). This is not simply because God's creative task is finished but because mankind is the pinnacle of all he has made ...Read More ➔
The Person of the Holy Spirit
By: Sam Storms
The Person of the Holy Spirit
By: Sam Storms
"All that we spiritually know of ourselves, all that we know of God, and of Jesus, and His Word, we owe to the teaching of the Holy Spirit; and all the real light, sanctification, strength and comfort we are made to possess on our way to glory, we must ascribe to Him. . . . Where He is honoured, and adoring thoughts of His person, and tender, loving views of His work are cherished, then are experienced, in an enlarged degree, His quickening, enlightening, sanctifying and...Read More ➔
The Power of Pentecost
By: Sam Storms
The Power of Pentecost
By: Sam Storms
A. The Event vv. 1-13 When did this event occur? "Pentecost" = lit., 50th, because it fell on the 50th day after the Sabbath of Passover. Where did this event occur? According to v. 2, they were in a "house" (cf. Acts 1:12-26). What exactly happened? There were 3 signs or sensory phenomena that pointed to the Spirit's arrival: sound, sight, speech (they heard something, saw something, and said something): 1.  ...Read More ➔
The Ultimate Aim of Theology
By: Sam Storms
The Ultimate Aim of Theology
By: Sam Storms
The ultimate goal of theology is not knowledge, but worship. If our learning and knowledge of God do not lead to the joyful praise of God, we have failed. We learn only that we might laud. Another way of putting it is to say that theology without doxology is idolatry. The only theology worth studying is a theology that can be sung. Jonathan Edwards put it this way: "Now what is glorifying God, but a rejoicing at that glory he has displayed? An un...Read More ➔
User-Friendly Deliverance - Part I
By: Sam Storms
User-Friendly Deliverance - Part I
By: Sam Storms
A. Six reasons why Christians avoid deliverance ministry 1. Christians avoid deliverance ministry because they have been offended by those who have taken it to unbiblical and damaging extremes. 2. Christians avoid deliverance ministry because they wrongly believe that deliverance is a special ministry for special peop...Read More ➔
User-Friendly Deliverance - Part II
By: Sam Storms
User-Friendly Deliverance - Part II
By: Sam Storms
In continuation of Part 1 . . . E. Encounters with the Demonic and Deliverance in the Book of Acts See Acts 5:16; 8:5-8; 13:6-12; 16:16-18; 19:12 Acts 19:13-17 is worthy of special note. · Acts 19:13 contains the earliest known occurrence in Greek literature of the word "exorcist" (exorkistes) and the only occurrence of it in the NT. H...Read More ➔
When a Gifted Person Falls
By: Sam Storms
When a Gifted Person Falls
By: Sam Storms
My purpose here is not to address the question of whether those who have fallen should be restored to ministry. Rather, I want to speak to those who are suspicious of prophetic ministry because of the failure of one of its more gifted individuals. When someone in ministry falls, we often respond in one of two ways. Some experience excessive bitterness, refuse to forgive, and vow never to trust religious l...Read More ➔
Who Killed Jesus?
By: Sam Storms
Who Killed Jesus?
By: Sam Storms
Who was responsible for the death of Jesus? Who was responsible for the nails that tore into his flesh and for the crown of thorns that pierced his brow? Who was responsible for the humiliation and ridicule to which he was subjected? Who killed Jesus? One way to answer this question is by pointing the finger at either the historical or the heavenly cause of his death. Looking at his death from a purely historical perspective one might conclude th...Read More ➔
Worldviews
By: Sam Storms
Are You Called to Ministry - Part I
By: Sam Storms
Are You Called to Ministry - Part I
By: Sam Storms
Part One “We live in a post-vocational age. Without any theology of vocation we lapse into debilitating alternatives: fatalism (doing what is required by ‘the forces’ and ‘the powers’); luck (which denies purposefulness in life and reduces our life to a bundle of accidents); karma (which ties performance to future rewards); nihilism (which denies that there is any good end to which the travail of history might lead); and, the most common a...Read More ➔
Are You Called to Ministry - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Are You Called to Ministry - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Part Two There is a crucial need for clarity on the nature of vocation and the criteria by which one determines if he is subject to it. Following are five criteria, each of which must work in concert with the other four. (1) Constraint – The word “constraint” is not intended to suggest an unwillingness on the part of the individual, as if he pursues ministry due to external coercion. R...Read More ➔
Are You Called to Ministry - Part III
By: Sam Storms
Are You Called to Ministry - Part III
By: Sam Storms
Part Three There are a number of obstacles that potentially might hinder someone from pursuing pastoral ministry as vocation. These also account for the high percentage of those who either drop out of seminary or leave the pastorate prematurely. If we are to succeed in our efforts to direct people into vocational ministry it is essential that these barriers be identified and addressed. (1) One of those obstacles is the changing natur...Read More ➔
Original Sin and Total Depravity - Part I
By: Sam Storms
Original Sin and Total Depravity - Part I
By: Sam Storms
How shall we define “original sin”? The term has been used in any one of three ways: (1) to refer to the “original” original sin, i.e., the first sin of Adam; (2) to refer to “inherited” sin, i.e., that corruption of nature and guilt with which all are born; and (3) the causal relationship, if any, between Adam’s sin and our sin. Calvin focused his definition on (2). In the Institutes (II:1.8) he writes: “Original sin, the...Read More ➔
Original Sin and Total Depravity - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Original Sin and Total Depravity - Part II
By: Sam Storms
It would appear that Paul accounts for human corruption and our propensity for evil by appealing to the fall of Adam. But is it in fact true that all are born “in sin” in the sense that all inherit from birth an evil disposition and a proclivity for rebellion and unbelief? What evidence is there that all humanity is born morally corrupt and spiritually dead, deserving of divine judgment? One approach taken by Jonathan Edwards is to demonstrate the propensit...Read More ➔
Postmodernism - Part I
By: Sam Storms
Postmodernism - Part I
By: Sam Storms
(For those not familiar with the term Postmodernism or its fundamental ideas, I encourage you to visit the Historical Studies section on the website and click on Historical Theology. Session 38 is devoted to a brief description of the primary characteristics in the postmodern perspective. After first studying that material, I think what follows in this and the second lesson in this series will prove helpful.) Postmodernism would appear to be self-referentially incohere...Read More ➔
Postmodernism - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Postmodernism - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Perhaps the most extensive interaction with and response to postmodernist reader-response criticism and the principles of deconstruction is Kevin J. Vanhoozer’s book, Is There a Meaning in This Text? The Bible, the Reader, and the Morality of Literary Knowledge (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1998), 496 pp. What follows is a brief summary of Vanhoozer’s conclusions. The question that Vanhoozer seeks to answer is this: “Is there something in the text [any te...Read More ➔
Forgiveness: What it is, what it is not
By: Sam Storms
Forgiveness: What it is, what it is not
By: Sam Storms
“Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you” (Ephesians 4:32) “Most of the ground that Satan gains in the lives of Christians,” wrote Neil Anderson, “is due to unforgiveness” (Bondage Breaker, 194). I couldn’t agree more. It isn’t hard to figure out why, once we realize that unforgiveness breeds bitterness, resentment, anger, unkindness, and even despair. Nothing i...Read More ➔
Real Worship! A Study of Revelation 4-5 (Part I)
By: Sam Storms
Real Worship! A Study of Revelation 4-5 (Part I)
By: Sam Storms
George Frideric Handel is generally regarded as one of the greatest composers who ever lived. Although born in Germany, he spent most of his adult life in England and eventually was made a citizen of the British empire. His father was a physician and had hoped that George would follow in his steps. But his interest in music was simply too overwhelming. He proceeded to write over 20 oratorios, more than 40 full operas, as well as numerous concertos, cantatas, anthems, and...Read More ➔
Real Worship! A Study of Revelation 4-5 (Part II)
By: Sam Storms
Real Worship! A Study of Revelation 4-5 (Part II)
By: Sam Storms
B. Our Redeemer - 5:1-14 1. the Scroll - v. 1 G. B. Caird argues convincingly, in my opinion, that "the content of the scroll is God's redemptive plan, foreshadowed in the Old Testament, by which he means to assert his sovereignty over a sinful world and so to achieve the purpose of creation. John proposes to trace the whole operation of this plan from its beginn...Read More ➔
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part I
By: Sam Storms
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part I
By: Sam Storms
"But if I say, 'I will not remember Him or speak anymore in His name,' then in my heart it becomes like a burning fire shut up in my bones; and I am weary of holding it in, and I cannot endure it" (Jeremiah 20:9) What follows in these three brief articles is a word especially aimed at pastors and teachers and preachers. I hope everyone will take time to read them and heed them, but above all else I pray that those who have been entrusted with the sacred calling of...Read More ➔
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part II
By: Sam Storms
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part II
By: Sam Storms
The Necessity of Biblical Preaching 8 Reasons In the previous article I tried to explain why there is so little biblical preaching. Here I want to focus on why it is so critical that pastors be committed to the exposition of the Word. (1) We must preach because of the power of the Word of God to change human lives and to transform the experience of the church. Tragically, although they would hardly admit it openly, many preachers ...Read More ➔
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part III
By: Sam Storms
An Appeal to All Pastors: Why and How Should We Preach - Part III
By: Sam Storms
Is any one way or style or method for preaching superior or more biblical than another? My personal conviction is Yes. Allow me to put forth a case for Expository Preaching. By "expository" or "expositional" or "exegetical" preaching I have in mind a particular style or method in preaching. As Sinclair Ferguson explains, in expository preaching "the explanation of Scripture forms the dominant feature and the organizing principle of the message. All preaching should be ...Read More ➔
What Happens in the Eucharist? - Part I
By: Sam Storms
What Happens in the Eucharist? - Part I
By: Sam Storms
Reflections on 1 Corinthians 11:23-34 Let’s admit it: Protestants aren’t the most knowledgeable about the Eucharist and are actually somewhat uncomfortable with my use of the word because of its association with Roman Catholicism. Don’t be afraid. It comes from the Greek verb eucharisteo and simply means “to give thanks”. The noun form, eucharistia, means “thankfulness,” “gratitude,” “thanksgiving,” and ...Read More ➔
What Happens in the Eucharist? - Part II
By: Sam Storms
What Happens in the Eucharist? - Part II
By: Sam Storms
Recently a friend of mine asked my opinion of the meaning of Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 11, specifically, what the apostle had in mind when he spoke of receiving the elements of the Eucharist in an “unworthy manner” (11:27; ESV). The question drove me back to the study I did on this passage several years ago. I hope you find helpful what I discovered in my analysis of Paul’s words: “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of...Read More ➔
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