Rebecca Stark is the author of The Good Portion: Godthe second title in The Good Portion series.

The Good Portion: God explores what Scripture teaches about God in hopes that readers will see his perfection, worth, magnificence, and beauty as they study his triune nature, infinite attributes, and wondrous works. 

                     

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Wednesday
May212014

Linked Together: Doctrine

Orthodox
First, from Bobby Jamieson, here are ten reasons to love sound doctrine. You’ll find a short explanation of each point in the original post (Crossway Blog).

  1. Sound doctrine re-tells the single story that sweeps through all of Scripture.
  2. Sound doctrine summarizes and synthesizes the Bible’s teaching as a coherent whole.
  3. Sound doctrine is a guide and guard for reading and teaching the Bible.
  4. Sound doctrine is God’s roadmap for the Christian life and the life of the church.
  5. Sound doctrine nourishes holiness.
  6. Sound doctrine is the ground and pattern of love.
  7. Sound doctrine is the foundation of unity in the church.
  8. Sound doctrine is fuel for the fire of worship.
  9. Sound doctrine equips and emboldens evangelism.
  10. Sound doctrine fills up our joy.

And next: Did you know you can use the acronym HANDS to remember 5 arguments from scripture for the deity of Christ?

  1. Jesus shares the honors due only to Christ.
  2. Jesus shares the attributes of God.
  3. Jesus shares the names that are used of God.
  4. Jesus shares in the deeds that only God can do.
  5. Jesus shares the seat of God — that is, Jesus sits on God’s throne. 

You’ll want to read the whole post to learn more about each of these arguments (Come Reason’s Apologetic Notes). 

Heretical
From Justin Holcomb, two heresies to avoid (Koinonia):

  1. Marcionism: “Marcion is relevant to the church today because much contemporary teaching about Jesus and the Bible merely restates Marcion’s claims about the struggle between a God of love and a God of justice.” 
  2. Gnosticism: We see traces of gnosticism in contemporary Christianity, too. In songs and books, for instance,  which “teach this world and everything in it is bad… .” 

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