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Covenant PRC-NI Newsletter - December 2015

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11 December, 2015

Dear saints in the Protestant Reformed Churches,

Two Pallets

      On Thursday, 3 December, two pallets of Reformed literature from the US were delivered to the CPRC manse.  They contained many boxes of specific titles:  the last two British Reformed Fellowship (BRF) books, The Reformed Worldview and Ye Are My Witnesses; Federal Vision:  Heresy at the Root and Our Goodly Heritage Preserved from the RFPA; Christ's Spiritual Kingdom from Redlands PRC; our Reformed creeds, both the green hardback and the pink softback versions; A. W. Pink's The Sovereignty of God; three books of sermons by John Calvin; and Don Doezema's three-volume Upon This Rock.  Other boxes were packed with pamphlets from various PR evangelism committees and the daily devotionals from the Psalms.  Besides these were many other individual titles from the RFPA.

rfpabooks dec 2015

      It was a busy day with the opening of the boxes, checking them all off, putting CPRC stickers at the back of the many hundreds of books and pamphlets, and arranging them on our shelves.  Over the next few days, the excess books were transported to church, where some filled out the bookcase in the narthex and others were stored in boxes upstairs.

      Amazingly, though we had deliberately let our stock run low, we did not run out of a single book, but it was getting mighty close.  Now our spiritual arsenal has been replenished!  With the arrival of the beautiful new hardback on Gottschalk by Connie Meyer, we created a webpage to let our online customers know that it is now available from the CPRC Bookstore.

      Our thanks to the staff at the RFPA for packing all these materials for us and taking care of the paperwork for the transportation.  We are also grateful to the saints at AIM (Active in Missions) who gave us $1,000 towards the cost of the shipping at the American end.

Hus Lecture

      This year, 2015, was the 600th anniversary of the martyrdom of Jan Hus, the great pre-Reformer from Bohemia.  I had been looking forward to this commemorative year for some time, as it would give me an opportunity to study this great man, his life and his doctrine of the church.

Jhus 2015

      I gave a lecture in South Wales on “Jan Hus:  His Martyrdom and Ecclesiology” (8 October) with a good number in attendance.  This trip to Wales also enabled Mary and me to meet up with Timothy Spence, a member of the CPRC, who is studying medicine at Cardiff University.

      On 30 October, this speech was given as a Reformation lecture in the CPRC, this time with slides of quotations from Hus and pictures of the key locations in his life, including Husinec (where he was born), Prague (where he was a university lecturer and preacher at the Bethlehem Chapel), Kozi Hradek (the castle where he wrote much of his great work, De Ecclesia), and Constance (where he was burnt at the stake).  We had a fine night.  Advertising included an article in the Ballymena Guardian (29 October), and the English Churchman carried a report of the event (13 & 20 November).  The audio (www.cprc.co.uk/ huslecture.mp3) and the video (www. youtube.com/watch?v=ED8fpNVZ07M) of the lecture are both online.

Other News

      I had a letter exchange with a humanist in the pages of the Belfast Telegraph regarding the redefinition of humanity (9-17 November).  Alongside the evolutionary and politically-correct redefinitions of mankind, persons, marriage, gender, love, bigot, etc., is the redefinition of the omnipotent, holy God as the pathetic god of one attribute: an unrighteous, ineffectual love (www.cprf. co.uk/articles/redefininghumanity.html).

      Recently, the 13 CPRC catechumens had their midyear test; they did well. 

      The church has now set up the minister's pension.  The UK civil government is rolling out a programme that requires all employers to provide a pension to their employees.  Julian Kennedy, one of our deacons, spent many hours arranging this on behalf of the church council.

      “Christ's Intercession” is the subject of the latest CPRC box set of CDs.  It explains the character, extent, content, and mode of our Lord's intercession, as well as errors and mistrust concerning it, in connection with Belgic Confession 26.  Our Wednesday night doctrine class has now moved on to the next article on “The Catholic Christian Church” (www.cprf.co.uk/audio/belgicconfessionclass.htm).  What great and comforting truths!

tapeset dec 2015

      32 translations have been added to our website in the last two months (www.cprf.co.uk/languages.htm):  14 Spanish (baptism and the church), 9 Hungarian (Psalm singing, plus Calvin's sermons on election and reprobation, etc.), 7 Indonesian (Christian education by Brian D. Dykstra of Hope PR School, etc.), 1 Portuguese (God's uncommon grace) and 1 Nepali (Heidelberg Catechism, our 40th on-line language of this beautiful creed).

      The booking form for the 2016 British Reformed Fellowship (BRF) conference (“Behold, I Come Quickly:  The Reformed, Biblical Truth of the End”) should soon be coming out (http://brfconference. weebly.com).  We hope to see many of you at Castlewellan Castle, Northern Ireland (16-23 July)!

      Thank you all for your cards, support, and prayers!

In Christ,
Rev. and Mary Stewart

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Rev.J. Laning Declines Call to the Phillippines

On Sunday, Dec.13, 2015, it was annnounced in Doon PRC (IA) that Rev. James Laning (Hull, IA PRC) had declined her call to serve as second missionary to the Philippines (Nov.23).

May the Lord grant contentment and peace to the Lanings, to Doon PRC, and to the Kleyns in the Philippines. Let us remember this important cause in our daily prayers, now too as Doon's Council seeks to form a new trio from which to call once again.

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Mission News Updates - December 13, 2015

On this second Sunday in December we can provide these updates on the PRC mission trip the Philippines. Rev.D. Kleyn for the content for these reports.

 

ProfsRC RD dec 2015

FROM THE PHILIPPINES (from Missionary-pastor D.Kleyn):

Profs. Dykstra and Cammenga arrived safely in the Philippines. All their flights went fine, except for a delay of about 3 hours in Japan. They landed in Manila just before 1:00 am, and we made it back home by about 3:00 am. It’s good to have them here! They didn’t appear too travel weary, even after the delayed flight (see picture above). They will be here for two Sundays, D.V.

The main purpose of their visit is to hold meetings with the consistories of the PRCP in order to discuss the matter of a sister church relationship between the PRCA and the PRCP. These meetings are planned for Thursday (Dec. 17) and Sunday (Dec. 20). Their schedule also includes preaching in four different churches in the Metro Manila area on the two Sundays they’re here, and speaking at the 7M classes to be held this coming Tuesday.

 If you wish to learn more about the recent trip of Rev.Jon Mahtani to the Philippines and his assistance to Rev.Kleyn and the churches and saints there, visit this post on the Kleyn's blog.

JMahtani Nov 2015

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Reformed News Asia - November 2015 (Issue 23)

Issue 23 - November 2015

Daily Meditations - Dec 2015

“Is God’s will, as Reformed Christians teach, always accomplished? If so, why do we need  to pray for God’s will to be done?"

- Rev Martyn McGeown, on Praying God's Will Be Done


This issue of Daily Meditations takes us through Lord's Days 49-52. May you find comfort in these devotions.
DOWNLOAD
For hard copy orders of the Daily Meditations, please click here.
 
Pamphlets
We print pamphlets written by our members and those from other Reformed churches of like-minded faith. They include a wide range of topics from doctrines to church history and practical Christian living. These pamphlets serve to promote knowledge of the true God as expressed in the Reformed faith.
NEW Pamphlet!
(Part 1 of a 3-part series on articles on the Heidelberg Catechism)

Preach the Catechism! The Great Blessing of This Long-Standing Practice
by Prof Barrett Gritters
 
Do you know the history of preaching catechisms? Why does your our church preach from a 450-year-old man-made document each week?

This is the history of Reformed churches from their beginnings. And CERC practises it!

This article discusses the Dutch origins of the Reformers, the Arminians' objections to preaching the Heidelberg and the struggles our forefathers had in defending and maintaining this practice.

There are many blessings in Heidelberg Catechism preaching. This article explains 8 ways in which it is beneficial for us. Download and read more to find out how we benefit from the HC preaching!


Click hereto view our catalogue of pamphlets.

Click here to make an order.

All pamphlets are free. CERC reserves some discretion regarding large orders and/or orders from those outside Singapore.

 
Audio Recordings

At this year's Reformation Day Conference, Rev Andy Lanning gave three speeches under the theme "The Forgotten Sola Of the Reformation: Solus Foedus".

Was the Covenant a forgotten Sola? Which doctrine of the covenant is true? How does the covenant affect our lives as God's people?

Click to listen to the 3 RDC speeches!

Click here to access all our audio recordings.
 
Past Events...
 
Reformation Day Conference 2015
This year's Reformation Day Conference was held on 9 and 10 Nov, with Rev Lanning as the speaker.
Rev Lanning giving one of the speeches to an almost full house
Exhibits on the Reformation were set up in rooms around the church
Rev Lanning and Emmanuel at the book table
Salt Shakers promoting their latest issues
Youth Reformation Day Conference
 
Upcoming Events!
 
Vacation Bible School 2015
Gospel: A Witness Unto All Nations

8-11 Dec

Memories from last year's VBS...

 
Covenant Keepers' Camp 2015

Theme : Hear What The Spirit Saith Unto The Churches
Speaker : Pastor Andy Lanning
Date : 16 - 19 December (Wed-Sat)
Fees : $15 (2 or more days); $7 (2 or more meals)
Save the dates!

Contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for more information.

Memories from CKCKS Camp 2014...
 
Notes
Southwest PRC Evangelism

What must be the biblical and confessional response of Christians to the teaching of theistic evolutionists? This and other questions were addressed in a lecture by Prof Ronald Cammenga titled “Theistic Evolution: Should the Church Make Peace or War?” at Grace Community Church in Hudsonville, MI on Friday October 9 at 7.30pm.

Click here to access the video recording.

 
NEW CLM WEBSITE!!

Visit our new CLM website to read the latest articles and access archives of the Daily Meditations. Click the picture to access.

 
Salt Shakers
Salt Shakers is a bi-monthly magazine published by the youth in CERC. Included in each issue are writings pertaining to both Reformed doctrine and practical theology. Articles are contributed by the Session, youth and members of CERC, as well as pastors and professors from the Protestant Reformed Churches in the USA and Northern Ireland. Salt Shakers also features articles from other Reformed publications, notably the Standard Bearer and Beacon Lights. Click here to access!
 
Covenant Evangelical Reformed Church
We are a Reformed Church that holds to the doctrines of the Reformation as they are expressed in the Belgic Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism and the Canons of Dordt.

Lord’s Day services on Sunday at 930 am & 2 pm • 11 Jalan Mesin, #04-00, Standard Industrial Building, Singapore 368813 • Pastor: Rev Andy Lanning  • www.cerc.org.sg 
 

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November 2015 PRC Seminary Journal Now Available!

PRTJ Nov 2015 coverThe faculty of the PRC Seminary have just published the next PRC Seminary Journal. The November 2015 issue (Vol.49, #1) contains an interesting variety of articles and book reviews, which make for profitable reading for pastors, officebearers, and Reformed believers (see the cover image here and the editor's notes below).

The following are Prof. R. Cammenga's "Editor's Notes" for this issue:

     Welcome to the pages of the frst issue of volume 49 of the Protestant Reformed Theological Journal.  The frst article in this issue is the transcript of the speech that Dr. John Bolt gave to the student body and faculty of the Protestant Reformed Seminary, as well as area ministers this past Spring.  Dr. Bolt is familiar to the constituency of the Protestant Reformed Churches as an outspoken critic of the treatment of Herman Hoeksema by the 1924 Synod of the Christian Reformed Church.  Besides critical of the treatment of Hoeksema, he also fnds fault with the doctrinal formulations of the 1924 Synod defining and defending common grace.  In his article, Dr. Bolt points out what he believes to be the inadequacies of the “Three Points” and offers alternative formulations.  Even though the very worthwhile question-and-answer session that followed Dr. Bolt’s speech cannot be reproduced here, we trust our readers will proft from the transcription of the speech.

     Our readers are once again favored with an article by a familiar contributor to PRTJ, Dr. Jürgen Burkhard Klautke, professor in the Academy for Reformed Theology in Marburg, Germany.  This article is the transcription of a speech by Dr. Klautke at a conference sponsored by the PRCA denominational Committee for Contact with Other [Foreign] Churches. The speech is a stirring defense of the truth of God’s covenant of grace, according to which elect believers are “in Christ,” as is the language of our Lord in His High Priestly prayer. Along the way, Dr. Klautke engages in necessary polemic against those who have perverted the truth of God’s Word that believers are “in Christ.

     This issue contains the frst three parts of an eighteen part “John Calvin Research Bibliography” by the undersigned.  This bibliography was constructed over the course of a number of years and copies of it were distributed to students who took a newly developed interim course on “The Theology of John Calvin.”  It was thought that publishing this bibliography would make available a valuable resource for any who are interested in doing research on the great Reformer John Calvin.  Each section of the bibliography corresponds to a class session devoted to that main topic, with the related sub-topics that were covered in the class listed beneath each main topic. 

     Prof. David Engelsma, emeritus Professor of Dogmatics and Old Testament in the Protestant Reformed Theological Seminary, contributes a review article of Reformed Thought on Freedom: The Concept of Free Choice in Early Modern Reformed Thought, edited by Willem J. van Asselt, J. Martin Bac, and Roelf T. te Velde.  The book examines the teaching of leading Reformed theologians of the sixteenth through the early eighteenth centuries on the freedom of the will.  It demonstrates that the Reformed tradition has consistently rejected the
error of “free will,” while at the same time upholding genuine human freedom.  Be sure to read this very worthwhile extended review—and then perhaps get the book and read it for yourself.

      As always, this issue of PRTJ contains a number of excellent book reviews.  This is a much appreciated feature of any theological journal, and that certainly is the case with our journal.  We take this opportunity to express our thanks to the men who regularly contribute book reviews.  Hopefully they know how much our readers anticipate their regular contributions in each new issue and beneft from them.

      We remind our readers that our journal is made available free of charge.  The cost of its production and mailing are covered by the seminary.  Your gifts, therefore, are appreciated.  And many of you do send gifts periodically.  We are grateful for your support.

      Now read and enjoy. Soli Deo Gloria!

You may find this issue in digital form at the Seminary's Journal page (pdf for now - also attached here; Mobi and ePub coming soon). If you would like to subscribe to this Journal, kindly call or write the Seminary at the information provided on its website homepage.

Doon PRC Calls Rev.J.Laning for Missionary to the Philippines

LaningJamesOn Monday evening, November 23, 2015, the congregation of Doon PRC called Rev. James Laning (Hull, IA PRC) to serve as second missionary to the Philippines.

May the King of the church lay His will plainly on the heart and mind this of this servant of God, so that he may know and do the will of his Master.

Let us remember the brother, his wife, and his family in our prayers.

Rev.Laning plans to answer this call by Dec.13.

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Latest Issue of Covenant Reformed News - November 2015

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Covenant Reformed News

November 2015  •  Volume XV, Issue 19


The “Whole World” in I John 2:2
 

A reader asks if the Arminian and Amyraldian doctrine of universal atonement is taught in I John 2:2: “And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world.”

Here are two simple arguments from the context which prove that I John 2:2’s reference to the “whole world” cannot refer to absolutely everybody, including the reprobate.

First, the word “propitiation” (2:2) refers to the turning away of God’s wrath by its being borne by Christ the substitute. If the Lord Jesus really bore God’s wrath for everybody, then nobody can go to hell, for their punishment has already been borne for them by Him. But the reprobate wicked do perish everlastingly, therefore Christ is not the propitiation for the sins of everyone.

Second, Christ is our “advocate with the Father” (2:1). But surely He is a perfect advocate who wins all His cases and never loses even one case! His intercession with the Father is completely successful and always attains its end! This is exactly what Scripture teaches (John 11:41-42; Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:25). As Francis Turretin (1623-1687) puts it, “It is gratuitously supposed that a universal intercession can be granted. For as he is always heard by the Father (John 11:42), if he would intercede for all, all would be actually saved” (Institutes of Elenctic Theology, vol. 2, p. 464)!

Note that I John 2:1-2 inextricably links Christ’s atonement and His intercession: “we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: And he is the propitiation for our sins.” When Christ enters the presence of the Father to plead for His people, He does so on the basis of His accomplished redemption (Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:25-28; 9:24-26).

These two things (atonement and intercession) are the two aspects of His priestly office, for a priest offers a sacrifice to God and prays to Him on the basis of the sacrifice. But Christ does not intercede for everybody, as He Himself expressly declared, “I pray not for the world” (John 17:9). This is also evident for, if the Lord did, all would be saved, for God always answers His prayers, as Christ Himself averred, “Father, I thank thee that thou hast heard me. And I knew that thou hearest me always” (John 11:41-42). Since Christ does not pray for everybody, He is not the propitiation for everybody.

Listen to the argument of John Owen (1616-1683): “These two acts of his priesthood are not to be separated; it belongs to the same mediator for sin to sacrifice and pray. Our assurance that he is our advocate is grounded on his being a propitiation for our sins. He is an ‘advocate’ for every one for whose sins his blood was a ‘propitiation,’ I John ii. 1, 2. But Christ does not intercede and pray for all, as himself often witnesseth, John xvii.; he ‘maketh intercession’ only for them who ‘come unto God by him,’ Heb. vii. 25. He is not a mediator of them that perish, no more than an advocate of them that fail in their suits” (A Display of Arminianism, p. 91).

Also, what sense would it make for I John to tell its readers that Christ bore the wrath of God against everybody (2:2) and is an advocate to intercede for everybody (2:1), only to refer a few chapters later to the unpardonable sin (5:16-17). If we are not to pray for those who have committed the unpardonable sin, why would Christ pray for those who have committed it? He surely knows who they are! Moreover, as we have seen, Christ’s prayers are always answered (John 11:41-42), so clearly He does not pray for them.

In short, the “whole world”in I John 2:2 does not refer to everybody head for head (cf. Rom. 1:8; Col. 1:6; I John 5:19; Rev. 12:9). It refers here to the “whole world” especially of Jews and Gentiles (John 11:51-52), but also the world of every kindred, tribe, tongue, etc., of both young and old, rich and poor, male and female, etc.

John Calvin (1509-1564) said this in his commentary on I John 2:2: “Here a question may be raised, how have the sins of the whole world been expiated? I pass by the dotages of the fanatics, who under this pretence extend salvation to all the reprobate, and therefore to Satan himself. Such a monstrous thing deserves no refutation ... the design of John was no other than to make this benefit common to the whole Church. Then under the word all or whole, he does not include the reprobate, but designates those who should believe as well as those who were then scattered through various parts of the world. For then is really made evident, as it is meet, the grace of Christ, when it is declared to be the only true salvation of the world.”

Regarding Calvin’s understanding of I John 2:1-2, Jonathan Rainbow writes, “That settles it. So John’s words, ‘the whole world,’ mean ‘the whole church,’ ‘the faithful,’ and ‘the children of God.’ Like [Martin] Bucer [1491-1551], Calvin bypassed the subtleties of the scholastics and returned to the straightforward particularism of Augustine [354-430] and Gottschalk [c. 808-c. 867]” (The Will of God and the Cross, p. 134).

Likewise, A. W. Pink (1886-1952) states, “... when John added, ‘And not for ours only, but also for the whole world,’ he signified that Christ was the propitiation for the sins of Gentile believers too, for, as previously shown, ‘the world’ is a term contrasted from Israel. This interpretation is unequivocally established by a careful comparison of I John 2:2 with John 11:51, 52” (The Sovereignty of God, p. 259).

Thus the purpose of I John 2:1-2 is to comfort the penitent believer with the perfect sufficiency of the high priestly work of Jesus Christ, both as our “propitiation” and “advocate,” for each and every one of God’s children in the “whole world,” Jews and Gentiles, near and far, etc. Instead of denying that we sin (1:8, 10), we confess our sins to receive cleansing (1:9) through Christ our propitiation and advocate (2:1-2), so that we have communion with the Father through His Son (1:3), know His light (1:5), fellowship with one another (1:7) and receive God’s joy (1:4)!  Rev. Angus Stewart

Our Old Man and New Man (1)
 

I shall have to summarize the questions asked in this issue of the News, for the questioner sent in more material than we have room for in this article. The issue involves the New Testament concepts of our “old man” and our “new man.” The questions ask for these terms to be identified and the concepts explained.

The questioner especially refers to two texts: (1) “That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts; And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness” (Eph. 4:22-24); (2) “Lie not one to another, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds; And have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him: Where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all” (Col. 3:9-11).

The texts seem to convey the idea that in the life of the Christian this work of God is completed (Col. 3:9-10) and yet the believer is admonished to put off the old man and put on the new man (Eph. 4:22-24).

The questioner further says, “This leads to a wider question concerning the nature and extent of the change that has taken place in the believer. What is the believer’s relationship to the old man and the old nature?” He then points out that II Corinthians 5:17 speaks of the believer as a “new creature.” He reminds us that Ephesians 2:3 teaches that we “were by nature children of wrath.” Are we to infer from this that when we were quickened we were given a new nature? If so, where do the struggles of Romans 7 come from?

The questioner ends with saying, “I recognize these are fundamental questions but the answers sometimes given are anything but clear.” To this, I will definitely add a loud “Amen.”

At the British Reformed Fellowship (BRF) in Scotland, held in 2014, Prof. Engelsma and I discussed these questions at some length in speeches dealing with the biblical doctrine of sanctification.

I understand these lectures will be published in book form next year by the BRF and will be available at the BRF Conference in 2016 and from the bookstore of the Covenant Protestant Reformed Church, DV.

I will attempt, first of all, to define the important terms.

The Christian is a most unusual person. Some have even suggested that he is a spiritual schizophrenic. This is really not far from the truth. By nature, the Christian is indeed a child of wrath, and dead in trespasses and sins. In that sense, he is no different from anyone else in the world. Sin is, after all, not merely doing something wrong but it is a deadly disease of the entire nature of man. The sinner is incapable of doing any good. He is dead in trespasses and sins (Eph. 2:1).

Let it be understood that the nature of a man is his entire physical and psychical make-up. That is, a man’s nature is his body and soul, while his soul consists of his mind and his will (his emotions are a part of his will). Total depravity means that his entire nature is corrupted and incapable of doing anything good (Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 3).

The Scriptures teach us that the elect child of God is regenerated. Regeneration is that work of God through the Spirit of Christ that creates a new heart in man. That new heart is living in union with Christ. The life it possesses is everlasting and heavenly life, even fellowship with God through Christ.

Without going into detail, we may define the heart as the moral and ethical centre of man’s nature (Prov. 4:23). It is that part of a man that shapes the entire nature of man spiritually and morally. If his heart is pure, the whole man is pure. If his heart is depraved, the whole man and all his deeds are wicked.

Thus the heart of man is a man’s entire nature in principle. It is a microcosm of the entire nature of man. The heart is to the entire man what an acorn is to an oak tree and what a corn kernel is to a mature stalk of corn.

The entire oak tree is in that small acorn. Nothing new is ever added. An acorn can never become anything else but an oak tree, and an oak tree always begins with an acorn. But for an acorn to become a towering oak tree takes time, a lot of time.

One important difference makes my figure of an oak tree limited. The regenerated heart of an elect becomes the new man that every saint will be when he goes to heaven and Christ comes again to make all His people like He is, in all His glory and blessedness. But this happens only as God, through the means of grace, causes that new man gradually to become what he will be. The change that makes a depraved sinner a perfected saint, higher in glory than an angel, comes through death when our souls are glorified, and it comes in the resurrection of the body when our bodies are glorified through the resurrection.

The “old man” is the old depraved nature, which we carry with us till we die. The “new man” is the regenerated heart and our entire nature insofar as the heart influences it. Those who were at the 2014 BRF Conference may remember the diagrams I drew on the white board to illustrate this.

That definition and description of terms is sufficient for this issue of the News, but there is more to say. Please save this issue so that you are able to refer to it when we pick up, God willing, the subject in the next issue.  Prof. Herman Hanko
----------------------------------------------------
 

A box set of 12 CDs or DVDs of the 2014 BRF Conference entitled “Be Ye Holy: The Reformed Doctrine of Sanctification” is available for £12 (inc. P&P) from the CPRC Bookstore. You can also listen or watch these lectures free on-line.
 

 

Covenant Protestant Reformed Church
83 Clarence Street, Ballymena, BT43 5DR • Lord’s Day services at 11 am & 6 pm
Website: www.cprc.co.uk • Live broadcast: www.cprf.co.uk/live
Pastor: Angus Stewart, 7 Lislunnan Road, Kells, N. Ireland, BT42 3NR • (028) 25 891851  
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.www.youtube.com/cprcniwww.facebook.com/CovenantPRC
 

Christ’s Intercession

6 classes on Belgic Confession 26 plus
a bonus disk on CD in an attractive box set

 For whom does Christ pray? Does he intercede against other people? What does He pray for us? Does He bow down on His knees
in prayer for us? How does Christ’s intercession compare with and relate to the Holy Spirit’s intercession? How is all this of immense comfort to us? Bonus Disk: "The Intercession of the Spirit" (Rom. 8:26-27)
 
£8/box set (inc. P&P)

Listen free on-line or   
Post orders to: 
CPRC Bookstore,
c/o Mary Stewart,
7 Lislunnan Road, Kells, Ballymena, BT42 3NR

Just Dad: Stories of Herman Hoeksema

by Lois Kregel
144 pp., softback

Many people are familiar with the public persona of Herman Hoeksema. But to his family he was "just Dad." This delightful anecdotal biography written by his youngest child records many stories about him, some perhaps familiar but others never before told.

£6.60 (inc. P&P)

Order this and much more
on-line from the
CPRC Bookstore.

Make cheques payable to “Covenant Protestant Reformed Church.” Thank you!
 

S. Wales Lecture

"Spiritual Gifts"


Spiritual gifts are both a complicated and controversial issue. The Spirit has given gifts to the church for her edification.
Which ones? To whom? To what end? Come and hear what God’s Word has to say on this matter.

Speaker: Rev. M. McGeown

Thurs., 19 November
7:15 PM


at The Round Chapel
(274 Margam Rd., Port Talbot, SA13 2DB)

ALL WELCOME!

www.cprf.co.uk/swales.htm
www.limerickreformed.com


 

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Latest Issue of "Salt Shakers" from the "Covenant Keepers" - November 2015

"Covenant Keepers", the youth ministry of the Covenant Evangelical Reformed Church of Singapore (our sister church), has just released issue #35 of "Salt Shakers" (November 2015),their youth magazine.

Once again the "SS" is packed with interesting and edifying articles, and our PRC young people especially are invited and encouraged to read it.

Below you will find a note from the "SS" Committee introducing the contents of this issue and images of the cover and table of contents. The entire issue is also attached here in pdf form.

Dear readers, 

We are thankful to be able to bring to you Salt Shakers issue 35! Another year of publishing has come and gone; the hour of history grows later, and the footsteps of our Lord Jesus Christ rapidly approach. Yet in the darkness of our present age, and as we look back on the events of the year, the saints may confidently confess: God is our refuge and our strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea.
Do take the time to be edified by many excellent articles in this issue! Some of which include an examination of the teachings of the "Hyper Grace" and "Prosperity Gospel" message in Hyper Graceand a practical discussion of the Reformed distinctive of total depravity in Knowledge of Total Depravity and Self Esteem. We heartily thank all writers for their hard work and contributions to this issue of Salt Shakers. 
 
Pro Rege, Chua Lee Yang, On behalf of the Salt Shakers Committee

SS 35 Nov 2015 Page 1
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The committee is also pleased to publish the Salt Shakers Special Report: The History of Reformed Covenant Theology by Prof Herman Hanko. While many of our readers may be seeing this for the first time, this is actually an edited reprint of an earlier publishing in 2014 that was only distributed locally. This new edition was released for the occasion of Covenant Evangelical Reformed Church's celebration of Reformation Day this year.

Salt Shakers Special Report History Reformed Covenant Theology Hanko 2015 Page 1

You will find this new publication by Prof.H. Hanko in our pamphlet section in pdf form.

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