Archive for the 'Religious Groups' Category

D. James Kennedy Funeral Service Live

by Phil Gons on September 13th, 2007

d-james-kennedy-funeral-service-live.jpgD. James Kennedy’s funeral service is live on CBN right now. It started at 1 PM EST and will end at 3 PM. You can tune in here and watch the remainder of the service.

Update: If you missed it live, it will show again at 4 PM.

Watch it now!

Read coverage here:

See also our previous posts:

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D. James Kennedy Funeral Announcement

by Phil Gons on September 6th, 2007

d-james-kennedy-funeral-announcement.jpgThe funeral arrangements for Dr. Kennedy are now available (also here):

Service Times:

  • Wed, Sept. 12 – Noon to 9:00pm EDT: Dr. Kennedy will lie in repose in the Grand Narthex at CRPC, 5555 North Federal Highway, Fort Lauderdale.

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D. James Kennedy (1930–2007)

by Phil Gons on September 5th, 2007

d-james-kennedy-1930-2007.jpgJust shortly after the announcement that D. James Kennedy (Wikipedia) had officially retired from his position as senior pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida—a position that he held for more than 48 years—comes the announcement that he has gone home to be with the Lord at the age of 76.

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Mother Teresa’s “Crisis of Faith”

by Phil Gons on August 30th, 2007

mother-teresas-crisis-of-faith.jpgYou have most likely read about David van Biema’s story “Mother Teresa’s Crisis of Faith,” which appeared on the cover of this week’s TIME Magazine. Biema’s article is based on the findings disclosed in Brian Kolodiejchuk’s new book, Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light, which publishes letters written my Mother Teresa (Wikipedia) never before made public.

Here is a statement that represents well the inner struggles and doubts that she experienced:

Jesus has a very special love for you. As for me, the silence and the emptiness is so great that I look and do not see, listen and do not hear. —Mother Teresa to the Rev. Michael Van Der Peet, September 1979

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D. James Kennedy Retires

by Phil Gons on August 27th, 2007

d-james-kennedy-retires.jpgDr. D. James Kennedy (Wikipedia) has officially retired from his position as senior pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, a PCA church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He started the church on June 21, 1959 and has been the senior pastor for 48 years.

Kennedy preached his last sermon on Christmas Eve of 2006, only days before his heart attack. He has not been back in the pulpit since.

His replacement has not yet been chosen, but the process is underway and “is expected to take between one and two years.”

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Egalitarianism on the Rise in Evangelicalism

by Phil Gons on August 27th, 2007

egalitarianism-on-the-rise-in-evangelicalism.jpgTimothy Bayly has a post on the recent trend towards egalitarianism in several evangelical institutions. He mentions Campus Crusade for Christ, Navigators, InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation, Calvin College and Seminary, Wheaton College, Dallas Theological Seminary, and Westminster Seminary—all of which are showing signs of heading down the slippery slope. Some (IVCF and Wheaton) are further along than others.

Do you share Timothy’s concern for these institutions, or do you applaud these changes?

Read Timothy’s post.

HT: Current Christian

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How Much Do Pastors Make?

by Phil Gons on August 23rd, 2007

how-much-do-pastors-make.jpgAccording to the 2006 Compensation Handbook for Church Staff (Amazon), the average US pastor makes $77,096 per year. As you would expect, the single largest factor determining that amount is the number of regular attenders.

Excluding insurance and educational benefits, senior pastors with a worship attendance of more than 1,000 people made an average of $111,052. That’s 73 percent more than the $64,266 paid to pastors with a worship attendance of 300 people or fewer.

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One Roman Catholic Church vs. Thousands of Protestant Churches?

by Phil Gons on August 23rd, 2007

one-roman-catholic-church-vs-thousands-of-protestant-churches.jpgIf you’ve had many conversations with Roman Catholics, you’re probably well aware that many like to compare the one, unified Roman Catholic Church with the divided and splintered Protestant church, which has spawned tens of thousands of denominations.

Scott McKnight argues in “From Wheaton to Rome: Why Evangelicals Become Roman Catholic”1 that unity is one of the four main reasons for Protestants’ becoming Roman Catholics.

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Notes
  1. JETS 45:3 (Sept 2002): 451–72. [↩ back]
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The Resurgence of Calvinism

by Phil Gons on August 9th, 2007

the-resurgence-of-calvinism.jpgIt’s hard not to miss it. There’s been a significant resurgence in Calvinism in both evangelicalism and fundamentalism. Blogs, websites, books, conferences—Calvinists are popping up everywhere.

At Bob Jones University where I received undergraduate and seminary degrees, dozens of men were going in with Arminian or middle-of-the-road leanings and coming out four- or five-point Calvinists. The trend was unmistakable, especially among the seminary guys and often after taking Systematic Theology. You might be suspecting that this was the result of the persuasive arguments of an unflinching five-point Calvinist faculty, but for most part the faculty members warned against the dangers of Calvinism—at least the five-point kind.

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Two Baptist Perspectives on Baptism

by Phil Gons on August 9th, 2007

two-baptist-perspectives-on-baptism.jpgWayne Grudem (Wikipedia | Theopedia), a Baptist professor at Phoenix Seminary and theologian in the Evangelical Free Church of America, argued in his Systematic Theology that mode of baptism should not be a point of division regarding church membership.

He has since changed his position and rewritten the section—seeing the position of compromise at inherently problematic based on the fact that two views on baptism as mutually exclusive.

Fellow Baptist theologian and pastor John Piper (Wikipedia | Theopedia) disapproves and has responded to Grudem’s change of thinking on the issue.

Update: Grudem responds to Piper’s criticisms.

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