Communicating the Gospel without Compromise

Mark Mittelberg

In our culture today, it can be easy to diminish the gospel when sharing our faith, not wanting to offend others or point out flaws in their belief. But there is an urgent need to help others understand the real gospel in order for people to receive Christ's forgiveness. Some people are relativistic and believe whatever feels right, others just hold their faith because they grew up with it, and others believe because an authoritative figure has placed a pressure on them to believe. We can help people see the need to look at evidence for their faith. Through evidence and refusal to compromise, we can help those around us come to a real, sincere faith in the God of the Bible.

Becoming a Community of Truth

Mike Sullivan
Ephesians 4:14-15

Community is an integral and vital part of the Christian faith, but being a community of truth is something that often gets overlooked. We are called to be open with one another, as well as with God, not living double-lives or living in darkness. We need to be accountable to one another in healthy ways and in an environment that supports sharing what is really happening in our lives. Through regularly being involved in this kind of community, we can experience true growth and deep relationships.

The Writings of Brian McLaren

Gerry Breshears
Ephesians 4:14-15

In Breshears' opinion, The Story We Find Ourselves In is THE theology of the emergent church, and exactly what it calls itself - a (fictional) story. The emergent church nobly started as a group of young leaders who wanted to "take Christianity to the streets" in opposition to postmodern spirituality and in contrast to fundamentalism. Today, the emergent church has unfortunately separated itself from the evangelical essentials and stands in stark opposition to the true Gospel of Christ. Instead of critiquing contemporary culture, it critiques the Church, and in the case of McLaren, the critique is not Biblically-based. Breshears exposes McLaren's theology as not taking into account all of Scripture, but rather only certain parts. The only real test of truth is the Word of God, the Bible.\r\n

Emergent Meets Evangelical Dialog

Dennis McCallum
Noel Britton
Jesse Schroeder
Ephesians 4:14-15

In a conversation between Dennis McCallum, Noel Britton, and Jesse Schroeder, emergent and evangelical beliefs were explored and compared. Britton and Schroeder are involved in the Emergent Cohort and were able to explain, through audience questions and pre-established categories, what the emergent movement is and what they believe about central ideas of Christianity. The two sides talked specifically about the differences in their views of truth and of Jesus' atoning work on the cross.

A Biblical Meditation on Experience and Truth

D.A. Carson
Psalms 1

As D.A. Carson exposits Psalm 1, a few blaring questions come to mind. For one, the stark contrast between the righteous ones who meditate on God's Word and the wicked may seem too black and white for our modern experience. Through this lecture, however, Carson presents seven steps to process and think through Psalm 1. This includes understanding the different literary forms of the Bible, understanding how each genre works, describing Jesus' own parallel thinking, etc. Through this deeper, intellectual look through this psalm, we can truly gain understanding of meditating on the word. \r\n

Reaching College and High School Students in an Age of Cynicism

Scott Risley
Conrad Hilario
2 Corinthians 5:11

The percentage of student involvement in a church is decreasing at a staggering rate. Today's youth are growing up in an age of extreme cynicism toward everything from people and institutions to knowing truth. In order to effectively reach high school and college students, it's essential to look at the culture they were raised in and be able to both critique what the world has taught them about significance and replace that with God's perspective.

Are we Getting the Job Done? Is the Church Still Relevant?

Dennis McCallum
2 Timothy 4:1-2

The Church's mission is to reconcile the world to Christ, both bringing people to know to know the Lord and then to grow with him. Unfortunately, the American church is failing at this mission. Transfer growth has caused the appearance of perhaps doing well in areas, but this is not our mission. Across the country, it seems our culture is harder to reach than it was before, but we need to be careful to avoid the faults of the emergent church and other responses. The answer to this problem is not to dilute the gospel and avoid the hard truths, nor is it not to create a fortress around us, walling believers off from the world of temptation. We must stay relevant with our culture without changing the gospel, and we must make sure we are faithfully and boldly preaching God's Word.

The First Missionary Journey

Ryan Lowery
Acts 13:1-40

The history of missions is split between the harmful and the helpful, but if the claims of the Bible are true then missionaries are essential. Luke's historical account of Paul's first missionary journey shows what missions look like when done correctly. All of us should seek to be missionaries in our own culture or another.

General Revelation (Part 2)

Dennis McCallum
Romans 1:18-20

By exploring the areas of morality, freedom, and human dignity through the views of pantheism, animism, and theism, we see that it is only possible to remain internally consistent with our beliefs under one worldview: Christianity. To believe people are significant, free, moral beings implies that they were created with a spiritual nature and aren't simply matter. Romans 1:19 says that God "made Himself evident within us," and our actions show that at some deep level, we know this to be true.