Showing 10 results for “read the other articles in this series.”
(This is actually the second article of Rev. Engelsma's series. Due to a printer's error, the THIRD article appeared in the May 15 issue and was called the second installment. Our apologies for the mistake. To get the proper connection, please read this article first, and follow up with the May 15 a
2 This problem is discussed at greater length in the introductory article of last series. The interested reader can find it in the issue of June-July, 1963. History
(Editor's note: We receive the impression from the article that Rev. Hoeksema intended to continue this series in later editorials. He did not however, return to this subject, perhaps because of other pressing matters.)
Having read the most recent articles in the “Abstruse Melancholy” series, I would like to make a few comments. First, many thanks to the author for the amount of time and effort that clearly went into writing this series, and many thanks for much of the good practical and medical advice contained th
In a following article I will continue this discussion. There are still various matters that have either not been touched upon or are in need of more explanation.
Perhaps if I were to reread previous articles in this series I would discover that we've already touched on this matter. But in my pondering, now, of the first two chapters of I Corinthians, I find myself wondering if I had, before, gotten to the bottom of it. And maybe that's because one of the del
EDITORIAL NOTES -- Prof. H. Hanko We are interrupting the current series being carried in the Journal with articles on a different subject -- the subject of postmillennialism. The ministers of the denomination and many elders met in an all day con- ference on the last day of February to discuss th
We are hoping to begin a series of articles every other month on the “Ten Commandments.” We hope to follow the same three part format as we did with the series of articles on the “Fruit of the Spirit.” Look for these articles in coming months, D.V. Some of you may think that we are losing our marb
The charge is groundless, if not malicious. And this will be the content of the next article in this series.
EDITOR'S NOTES Prof. Russell J. Dykstra presents the first article of a series on "A Comparison of Exegesis: John Calvin and Thomas Aquinas." Because of the stature of these two theologians (Calvin in the Protestant, Le., especially Reformed Protestant tradition; Aquinas in the Roman Catholic tradit