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Mortification of Spin
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Heard & Seen
- Video: Christ the Only Way
R.C. Sproul - Video: The Gospel in Six Minutes
John Piper
Steve Nichols
Stephen J. Nichols, you can call him Steve, is Research professor of Christianity and Culture at Lancaster Bible College and Graduate School.
He received an MA in philosophy (West Chester University), and MAR in theology, and a PhD in historical and theological studies (Westminster Theological Seminary). He is the author of many books, including For Us and for Our Salvation: The Doctrine of Christ in the Early Church (Crossway) and Jesus Made in America: A Cultural History from the Puritans to The Passion of the Christ (IVP Academic). His forthcoming book is Getting the Blues: What Blues Music Teaches Us about Suffering and Salvation (Brazos). Steve lives with his wife, Heidi, and their children, Ben, Ian, and Grace, in Churchtown, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.


- Logic
- What We Talk About When We Talk About God
- Calvin and the Reformed Tradition: On the Work of Christ and the Order of Salvation
- God and the Atlantic: America, Europe, and the Religious Divide
- A Christian's Pocket Guide to Baptism
- The Devil and Pierre Gernet: Stories
- A Good Day to Die Hard
- Zero Dark Thirty
- Lady Jane Grey
- The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

What John the Baptist Teaches us About the Gospel
Preaching through John's gospel, I have paused to meditate upon the person and work of John the Baptist. Here was one who came as a "witness, to bear witness about the Light" (Jn 1:6). Consistently (1:7, 14, 20) we are told that the Baptist was not the Light but a witness to the Light.
Preaching through John's gospel, I have paused to meditate upon the person and work of John the Baptist. Here was one who came as a "witness, to bear witness about the Light" (Jn 1:6). Consistently (1:7, 14, 20) we are told that the Baptist was not the Light but a witness to the Light.
Doubting on Your Part Does Not Constitute a Crisis of Faith on Mine
One of the amusing things I have noticed in the last twelve months or so has been a shift in the rhetoric used by members of the older generation (40 plus) surrounding what twenty- and thirty-somethings will believe. Five years...
One of the amusing things I have noticed in the last twelve months or so has been a shift in the rhetoric used by members of the older generation (40 plus) surrounding what twenty- and thirty-somethings will believe. Five years...












