Reformed Thinking

The Sign of the Apostle: The Divine Intent and Cessation of Miraculous Workings

23 min · 20 jun 2026
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Beschrijving

Deep Dive into The Sign of the Apostle: The Divine Intent and Cessation of Miraculous Workings Both sources provide a Reformed, cessationist exposition of 1 Corinthians 12:10, arguing that the "working of miracles" was a temporary, apostolic sign-gift. These spectacular miracles were not intended as permanent fixtures for the church in every age but were sovereignly given to authenticate the apostles and their New Covenant message during the foundational era of the early church, prior to the completion of the New Testament canon. Addressing the historical context, the authors explain that the Apostle Paul wrote to the church in Corinth to correct a congregation that was plagued by spiritual pride, influenced by pagan ecstatic traditions, and obsessed with visible power. Paul's exegesis demonstrates that the Holy Spirit sovereignly distributes spiritual gifts according to His own will, entirely apart from human manipulation or demand. Furthermore, Paul insisted that all manifestations of the Spirit are strictly for the common good and corporate edification of the church body, rather than for personal elevation, entertainment, or private mystical experiences. He subordinated the exercise of any miraculous gift to the confession of Christ's lordship and the enduring practice of Christian love. The texts conclude that because the apostolic foundation has been securely laid and the Scriptures are complete, the extraordinary sign-gifts have permanently ceased. Consequently, the authors warn the modern church against charismatic sign-seeking, emotionalism, and prosperity theology, arguing that such pursuits critically undermine the sufficiency of the Bible. Believers are instead exhorted to rely on the complete, infallible Word of God, employ their permanent, non-miraculous gifts for faithful service, and trust in God's continuing providential power through the ordinary means of grace. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

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aflevering God's Nearness and Distance: Immanence and Transcendence artwork

God's Nearness and Distance: Immanence and Transcendence

Deep Dive into Christian Theology by Millard J. Erickson - God's Nearness and Distance: Immanence and Transcendence The biblical doctrines of divine immanence and transcendence describe how God relates to the created world. These two concepts must remain in strict balance, as overemphasizing either leads to a flawed theological understanding. Immanence refers to God’s active presence within nature, human history, and society. Scripture illustrates that God sustains all things and operates through both spectacular events and regular natural patterns. However, overstating immanence risks reducing God to a mere label for human values or falling into pantheism, where God loses his personal nature and independent status. Modern theological movements like classical liberalism, Paul Tillich's concept of God as the ground of being, and process theology have historically overemphasized this immanence. Properly understood, divine immanence implies that God can work through indirect means such as medicine, utilize secular organizations, and be detected within the orderliness of creation. Conversely, transcendence means that God is entirely separate from, independent of, and superior to his creation. While traditional models used spatial imagery to describe God as physically "above," modern theology utilizes different frameworks. Karl Barth described God as the completely other and unknown God, while Søren Kierkegaard explained transcendence through qualitative distinction and dimensional beyondness, suggesting God exists in an entirely different realm or dimension of reality. Other frameworks, like the theology of hope, emphasize a historical and eschatological transcendence where God operates from the future. The implications of transcendence establish that human beings are not the highest good, ensure that salvation is entirely God's achievement rather than human effort, and demand that humans approach God with awe and reverence rather than treating him as an equal. Ultimately, an orthodox understanding requires believers to look for God in both ordinary, natural processes and miraculous, extraordinary interventions. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

28 jun 202632 min
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פְּרִי (Peri): The Fruit of a Life Rooted in God’s Word

Deep Dive into פְּרִי The Hebrew noun peri, derived from the root verb parah, translates primarily as fruit and appears approximately 120 times in the biblical text. The Septuagint typically translates this term into Greek as karpos or genema. Its usage across the corpus is categorized into three main areas: literal agricultural produce, biological offspring, and the metaphorical consequences of human actions. In its literal sense, peri refers to the edible produce of plants, shrubs, trees, and field crops. Texts frequently mention the fruit of fruit-bearing trees, vines, vineyards, orchards, fig trees, and olive trees. It also broadly describes the harvest or general produce of the ground, indicating agricultural abundance. Common phrases like the fruit of the land highlight literal vegetation grown for human sustenance and survival. Beyond vegetation, peri is heavily utilized to describe biological descendants. The phrase fruit of the womb is a common idiom referring to human children, framing offspring as a successive generation and a direct reward from God. This reproductive sense is not limited to humans; it also explicitly applies to the young of livestock and animals, demonstrating a broader understanding of earthly fertility. Finally, the term carries rich metaphorical significance, representing the natural or logical results of human behavior. It illustrates the outcomes of specific actions, whether positive or negative, as well as the results of divine favor or judgment. Biblical writers use the fruit of one's hands to denote earnings or profit gained from labor, and the fruit of the mouth to describe the consequences of speech. In these theological contexts, fruit serves as a powerful metaphor for the wages of righteousness, the penalty of arrogance, or the broader consequences of a person's chosen way of life. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

28 jun 202632 min
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Keeping in Step with the Spirit: Humble Holiness (Galatians 5:25-26)

Deep Dive into Keeping in Step with the Spirit: Humble Holiness (Galatians 5:25-26) Galatians 5:25-26 serves as a foundational text bridging the theological reality of salvation with the practical ethics of Christian community. The passage establishes that true spiritual life originates exclusively through the regenerating power of the Holy Spirit, which is a sovereign act of grace apart from human merit or adherence to the Mosaic law. Because believers have been made alive by the Spirit, the apostle Paul issues a corresponding imperative: they must keep in step with the Spirit. This entails an orderly, daily alignment of one's conduct with the objective standards of the apostolic Word, rather than relying on subjective mysticism or carnal systems. Furthermore, this Spirit-directed conduct necessitates the death of conceit, or empty glory, within the local church. Paul specifically targets this pride because false teachers in Galatia were promoting legalistic requirements, like circumcision, which fostered self-exaltation and divided the congregation. Whether taking the form of legalistic boasting or antinomian license, conceit inevitably destroys church unity by producing two distinct relational sins: provoking and envying. Provocation aggressively challenges others out of a competitive sense of superiority, while envy harbors bitter resentment toward the spiritual blessings or perceived standing of others. Ultimately, the passage calls for corporate holiness and humble fellowship, demonstrating that sound doctrine and relational unity are inseparable. Believers are exhorted to look to Jesus Christ, who flawlessly kept in step with the Spirit and whose sacrifice on the cross decisively conquered the flesh and its passions. By rejecting worldly rivalries and resting in Christ's finished work, the church can manifest the true fruit of the Spirit in peaceful, loving communion. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

28 jun 202628 min
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The Beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ (Mark 1:1-8)

Deep Dive into The Beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ (Mark 1:1-8) Mark 1:1-8 serves as an urgent and majestic proclamation of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, deliberately bypassing genealogies to immediately announce the arrival of the divine King. The narrative is deeply anchored in the Old Testament, combining ancient prophecies from Isaiah and Malachi to demonstrate that the gospel is the precise historical execution of God’s sovereign decree, not a novel human invention. John the Baptist appears in the wilderness to break four hundred years of prophetic silence, signifying the pivotal transition between the Old and New Covenants. As the prophesied herald, John models profound humility by refusing to build a platform for himself or employ pragmatic, seeker-sensitive methods to attract crowds. Instead, he preaches a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. This preparatory ministry demands that individuals confront their spiritual bankruptcy, stripping away reliance on religious heritage and self-righteousness to lay low the mountains of human pride. True repentance is presented as a necessary, sovereignly granted turning from sin to prepare the heart for the Lord. Ultimately, these opening verses establish the absolute supremacy and high Christology of Jesus. John openly confesses his unworthiness to perform even the most menial task of untying the coming King's sandals, illustrating the infinite chasm between the human messenger and the divine Savior. While John administers a preparatory, external baptism with water, he points away from himself toward Christ, who possesses the exclusive authority to baptize His people with the Holy Spirit. Therefore, the passage summons the reader to abandon self-reliance and approach the sovereign King with repentant faith, recognizing that salvation rests entirely upon God's redemptive work. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

Gisteren30 min
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Covenant Fidelity in the Land of Sojourn (Genesis 50:4-6)

Deep Dive into Covenant Fidelity in the Land of Sojourn (Genesis 50:4-6) The provided texts offer a comprehensive theological, historical, and exegetical analysis of Genesis 50:4-6, a passage detailing Joseph’s request to bury his father Jacob in the Promised Land. This narrative is presented as a profound demonstration of covenant fidelity, highlighting the tension believers face when residing in a comfortable but pagan world. Though Joseph holds immense political power in Egypt, he recognizes that Egypt is merely a temporary place of preservation, while Canaan represents the eternal, divinely promised inheritance. A central theme is the absolute binding authority of covenantal oaths. Joseph's petition to Pharaoh is not driven by mere filial sentimentality but by a sacred vow he made to his dying father. This illustrates the sanctity of lawful oaths, which bind the conscience and direct conduct, even when they require navigating complex administrative protocols. Because of ceremonial defilement from mourning, Joseph respectfully uses the royal household as intermediaries, modeling a balanced submission to civil authorities without compromising his devotion to God. Furthermore, the passage highlights the absolute sovereignty of divine providence. God actively inclines the heart of Pharaoh, a pagan monarch, to grant Joseph's request, proving that earthly rulers ultimately serve heavenly decrees. The physical burial of Jacob in Canaan also serves as a prophetic signpost for the Israelites, ensuring them that their future lies in the Promised Land and pointing forward to the future bodily resurrection. Christologically, Joseph functions as a type of Christ, acting as a faithful intercessor for his people to secure their covenant destiny. Ultimately, the authors apply this text to modern believers, urging them to reject worldly assimilation, honor their sacred vows, and live as holy pilgrims whose final hope rests entirely on the enduring promises of God. Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReformedExplainer Worship Music: https://suno.com/playlist/3a498d0f-c90e-4981-8aa7-59834e7239f7 https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

Gisteren21 min