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83 items found for "mark burkill"

  • 5 Questions on Christianity, life & books

    The Latimer Trust asked Mark Meynell 1. How did you become a Christian? ____________ Mark Meynell is a director for Langham Preaching (part of Langham Partnership) and travels He is the author of When Darkness Seems My Closest Friend (IVP) and A Wilderness of Mirrors (Zondervan

  • Martin's insightful book list

    Mark by John Burgon A very strong case can be made that the last twelve verses of Mark are authentic.

  • Revisiting the Tudor Church Militant

    An insight into our new book edited by Mark Earngey and Stephen Tong. Featuring essays from various reformation scholars such as Ashley Null, Gerald Bray, Scott Amos, and Mark In Mark Earngey’s essay on John Ponet’s Short Catechisme, he returns this incredibly important formulary progressively reformed documents of the Edwardian reformation, even stating that church has, not two, but four marks To buy this excellent book click here. __________ Mark Earngey is Head of Church History at Moore Theological

  • A light that shall never be put out

    In Mark 6 we read about the death and martyrdom, of John the Baptist. The few passages in Mark’s gospel that are not directly about Jesus, are about John the Baptist. Mark is selecting this story not to tell us about Herod or John, but about Jesus. Mark wants us to understand the cost is not just awful for John the Baptist or dreadful for Jesus but Remember Mark is showing us Jesus’ pattern of discipleship: lose your life now, get glory later.

  • Recapturing the meaning of Anglicanism

    Book review of Reformation Anglicanism: Essays on Edwardian Evangelicalism Edited by Mark Earngey and In their introduction, editors Mark Earngey and Stephen Tong outline the purpose both of this collection The essays begin with Mark D. Mark Earngey then defends understanding John Ponet’s Short Catechisme as a neglected formulary of the While an apparent contradiction, these twin beliefs mark a theologian who was deeply read and widely

  • 5 Questions on Christianity, Life and Books

    The Latimer Trust asks Dr Mark Earngey 1. How did you become a Christian? clarity to our understanding of that line in Cranmer's classic collect about Holy Scripture: 'read, mark For the reformers, it seems that marking was an important step after reading, and before learning and Mark is one of the editors and contributors of "Reformed Anglicanism. . ____________ Mark Earngey is Head of Church History at Moore Theological College, Sydney.

  • 5 Questions on Christianity, Life & Books

    The Latimer Trust asks Mark Thompson 1. How did you become a Christian? claim “I am the way, the truth and the life, no one comes to the Father except through me”. _________ Mark

  • Be bold! Lessons from John the Baptist

    time we will look into the even more powerful story of the death of John the Baptist as recorded in Mark Mark 6:15-29 reminds us that Herod had no sensitivity to the Jewish people. Mark 6 offers at least two challenges to us as believers today: The first is the challenge for Christian

  • Christian by degrees?

    Synod debate on Freemasonry, I wrote a Foreword to a new edition of Hannah’s first book on the subject, Darkness unintelligible hotch-potch of pomposity and platitude that any intellectual approach or critique misses the mark ASK In Christian by Degrees Hannah examined in some detail the rituals of ‘The Holy Royal Arch,’ of Mark Masons and Ark Masons, of the Ancient and Accepted Rite and other paths taken by their initiates including Footnotes: [1] Walton Hannah, Darkness Visible, Augustine Publishing, first published 1952, 16th impression

  • Grace as gift

    Heartfelt praise will thus be a constant mark of true devotion: ‘I will extol the Lord at all times; (Psalm 34:1) This means, secondly, that a spirituality of grace-as-gift will always be marked by deep True devotion will always identify with Mary’s words: ‘My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices

  • The inheritance of God's servant

    They are an edited edition of talks that were given to mark 100 years of the birth of Broughton Knox depth of teaching, that often eschewed engagement with modern theology but was deeply biblical, that marked Mark Thompson explores his forty years as a lecturer there with twenty six as principle in the second Footnote: Sieghart, Mary Ann, Anglicanism’s New Holy Warriors, The Times, 21.04.2004 - a column based in part on an article by Humphrey Southern in the Mar/Apr ‘04 edition of Theology later re-worked in

  • Martin's insightful book list

    Reformation Anglicanism: Essays on Edwardian Evangelicalism, Mark Earngey & Stephen Tong An excellent

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