Heidelcast

R. Scott Clark
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Jul 2, 2016 • 28min

Heidelcast 107: I Will Be A God To You And To Your Children (3)

Last time we looked at some of the challenges we face in learning how to interpret Scripture properly and how the Ancient Christian Churches and the Reformed churches read the Scriptures, with Christ at the center. One way to understand this unity . . . Continue reading →
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Jun 16, 2016 • 42min

Heidelcast 106: I Will Be A God To You And To Your Children (2)

This is part 2 of the series: I Will Be A God To You And To Your Children. We’re talking about how to read the Scriptures, about what Scripture says about the covenant of grace, its administration, and baptism. One of the . . . Continue reading →
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Jun 12, 2016 • 39min

Heidelcast 105: I Will Be A God To You And To Your Children (1)

One of the most frequent topics and questions for discussion on the Heidelblog has been this: Who should be baptized and why? To anticipate an objection: some will say that the Heidelcast should not be addressing this subject because it causes needless . . . Continue reading →
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Jun 6, 2016 • 38min

Heidelcast 104: Recovering The Covenant Of Works (4)

Remember our definition of the covenant of works. It was that legal arrangement into which God voluntarily condescended to enter and by which he promised eternal blessedness to Adam, on the condition that Adam by personal, perfect, and perpetual obedience should keep . . . Continue reading →
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May 30, 2016 • 44min

Heidelcast 103: Recovering The Covenant Of Works (3)

The doctrine of the covenant of works was taught by the Dutch, the Germans, the French, the Swiss, the English, the Scots, and the Irish. It was taught in the 1560s (it was arguably implied in the 1561 Belgic Confession’s phrase “commandment . . . Continue reading →
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May 21, 2016 • 37min

Heidelcast 102: Recovering The Covenant Of Works (2)

For a doctrine that was almost universally held by Reformed theologians from the 1560s through the 19th century, and confessed explicitly twice in the Westminster Confession of Faith (1648), in the Westminster Larger Catechism, in the Savoy Declaration (1658), as well as . . . Continue reading →
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Apr 5, 2016 • 34min

Heidelcast 101: Presbytopia

What’s the big deal about being Presbyterian or Reformed? After all, isn’t it enough to love Jesus? Honestly, no. Of course you should love Jesus but then what? If someone else personally paid for all your legal offenses out of his own . . . Continue reading →
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Mar 24, 2016 • 41min

Heidelcast 100: Recovering The Covenant Of Works (1)

In contemporary Reformed Christianity, even in confessional churches, i.e., those churches where they not only formally hold the historic confessions but where they still profess to believe and seek to practice what we confess, two of the most disposable doctrines seem to . . . Continue reading →
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Feb 6, 2016 • 38min

Heidelcast 99: The Noah Paradigm

Christians in the USA live in an increasingly confused, confusing time. Hostility to the faith seems to be increasing. We seem to be witnessing a growing hostility even to the very idea that there is such a thing as nature with fixed . . . Continue reading →
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Oct 9, 2015 • 50min

Heidelcast 98: Salvation, Good Works, And Conditions

We in the Reformed world are in the midst of another controversy over sanctification, salvation, good works, and conditions in the covenant of grace. Are we justified by grace alone through faith alone but saved by grace, through faith and works? Is . . . Continue reading →

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