The Didache (The Early Church Fathers Series: Part 6)

The next stop on our journey through the Early Church Fathers is another anonymous document called The Didache: The Teaching of the Lord According to the 12 Apostles. Like the Letter to Diognetus, The Didache is dated to the early 2nd century. What is even more amazing is that it had been lost for centuries…

Continue reading →

The Letter to Diognetus (The Early Church Fathers Series: Part 5)

The next post in my Early Church Fathers isn’t actually about an early Church Father. Instead, it is about an early Church writing by an anonymous writer, some time in the early 2nd century, possibly around AD 130. It is written to someone whom the writer addresses as, “my lord Diognetus.” In any case, this…

Continue reading →

“The Wasteland” by T.S. Eliot–A Reading and Explanation

Last year, I did a blog series in which I did readings of various T.S. Eliot poems, in which I also provided brief explanations and analyses of those poems. For various reasons, even though I recorded my reading of perhaps T.S. Eliot’s most famous poem, The Wasteland, I never got around to making a video…

Continue reading →

The Early Church Fathers Series (Part 4): Some Reflections on Clement, Ignatius, and Polycarp

In this fourth installment of my series on the early Church Fathers, I want to pause and share some reflections regarding the first three Fathers I have looked at: Clement of Rome, Ignatius of Antioch, and Polycarp of Smyrna. These three are commonly referred to as the “Apostolic Fathers” because, although being the earliest of…

Continue reading →

Yet Another Interview Starring Me (by Paulogia)…all about Ken Ham, Worldview, and How to Understand Genesis 1-11

Over the past month, I’ve been surprisingly busy. I occasionally get asked to do an interview regarding my book Heresy of Ham, but over this past month, I’ve had three different requests! Here is #3 for your view pleasure. The guy who does this “Paulogia” YouTube channel is a former Christian turned atheist, but he…

Continue reading →

A Random Post Today on “Teaching Biblical Worldview” (and what a true Christian worldview is)

Back in 2003, when I took a job at a small Christian high school in Arkansas, I was introduced to the concept of “teaching Biblical Worldview.” Now, I was hired at that time mostly to teach English, but I was also asked to teach a class of Senior Worldview, which essentially sort of a Western…

Continue reading →

The Early Church Fathers Series: Polycarp of Smyrna (Part 3)

In this third installment of my blog post series on the early Church Fathers, I am going to look at Polycarp of Smyrna. Along with Clement of Rome and Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp was among the earliest Church Fathers after the age of the actual apostles. He was born in AD 69, right around the…

Continue reading →

The Early Church Fathers Series: Ignatius of Antioch (Part 2)

Shortly after the Jerusalem council of AD 49, the Apostle Peter relocated to Antioch to help lead the Church there. When Peter left for Rome, presumably at some point during the mid-50s, a man name Evodius became the new leader of the Church in Antioch. Then, in AD 70, the same year that Titus’ legions…

Continue reading →

My Conversation with John Griffin about the Recent Attack by Answers in Genesis on BioLogos…(and evolution, creation, and how to read your Bible)

I recently sat down with John Griffin for a discussion about the recent attack on BioLogos from Answers in Genesis, where AiG calls BioLogos a “house of heresy” all because it doesn’t embrace YECism. It’s a short 25-minute video. Enjoy!

Continue reading →