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At this year's Together on a Mission conference in Brighton, I was part of the team that took three seminars reflecting on different Christian authors. Having looked at John Piper and NT Wright’s understanding of justification, and then Bill Johnson’s view on healing, the lot fell to me to lead... Read more -
The establishment and subsequent collapse of the Munsterite “New Jerusalem” in 1534-35 did huge damage to the Anabaptist cause and to Protestantism as a whole. It is no coincidence that John Calvin, in publishing what became his seminal work, The Institutes (1536), made every effort to distance... Read more -
The original Anabaptists were the Zurich radicals. They were, in the very early 1520s, amongst the most enthusiastic admirers of Ulrich Zwingli, the leader of the Zurich Reformation from 1519 to his death in 1531. Right from the outset of his time in Zurich, Zwingli was at pains to be true to... Read more - Page ‹ First < 321 322 323 324 325 > Last ›