There is a strange tension pulsing through American Christianity right now. At the very moment when many believers are shouting louder to “take back the culture,” Jesus whispers a counterintuitive paradox: “Blessed are the meek.” It is precisely this upside-down ethic—the quiet . . . Continue reading →
Author Archives: Anthony Faggiano
Monergistic Sanctification: The Reformed Consensus
Few doctrines touch both the heart and the mind like sanctification, for it shapes not only what we believe but how we live. As Calvinists grow in their understanding of the doctrines of grace, one question often arises: Is sanctification monergistic or . . . Continue reading →
Why Weekly Communion? A Confessional Case for the Lord’s Supper
How often should our churches celebrate the Lord’s Supper? Practices vary among Reformed congregations—some celebrate weekly, others monthly or quarterly. Yet when we turn to Scripture, church history, the Reformed confessions, and voices like John Calvin and Louis Berkhof, a compelling case . . . Continue reading →


