Showing 10 results for “reformed magazine”
is predominantly Protestant Reformed, we are also aware that many other Reformed young people read our magazine. We also determined that many Reformed young people between the ages of eighteen and twenty-eight, married and single, read our magazine. It is the consensus of the staff, therefore, to wr
This is important because its Reformed character places us in the minority of religious publications. Many non-Reformed magazines have been and are published, but none are as distinctively Reformed and directed to Reformed youth as is Beacon Lights. Third, the reason for printing past articles is to
British Reformed Journal, no. 1 (January-March, 1993) WHY ANOTHER REFORMED JOURNAL* Rev G i se VanBaren It is with thankfulness to God that we introduce this first issue of the Journal of the British Reformed Fellowship. There are many magazines of every sort on the market, nor is there a lack of re
3. Reformed Guardian began as a small pamphlet first published on July 21, 1953 by ministers who had recently left the PRC in the schism. They were aggrieved by the suspension and deposition of Rev. Hubert DeWolf and wrote in his defense. On April 25, 1955, the pamphlet joined forces with Concordia
So now we have to listen to disco music and participate in disco dancing in order to reach and keep the young people in the church?! What these young people need is not dialogue but the means of grace, the chief of which is, according to the plain teaching of Scripture and our Reformed Confessions,
When two-thirds of the church membership of the churches left the Protestant Reformed Churches in the 1953 era, many who were subscribers, supporters, and writers left. Therefore it is astounding that this God-ordained magazine has continued to exist and to do that which it was founded to accomplish
It is a relatively new magazine out of Weimar, CA and I strongly recommend it for your personal growth in the Reformed faith. ❖ Science
New Periodicals During the course of the last few years the number of religious periodicals is again on the up-turn. This may in part be accounted for by the noticeable relief from the financial stress incident upon '29. There is a new type of magazine which digests articles from others and prints
in this issue: Editors Notes The Reformed Worldview on Behalfofa Godly Culture DalJidj. Enge!S1J1il The Doctrine ofEternalJustification (2) John P Jvlarcus APresbyterian View of Covenant Children (2) 114m';, L. Shand Book Reviews 1 2 47 70 95 -- 1 of 116 -- PROTESTANT REFORMED THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
Protestant Reformed Theological Journal Vol. 50, No. 1 148 church magazine for young men interested in training for missions. The approval of parents or guard- ian was required if the applicant was a minor (329). Already then our forefathers realized the need for special training if one desired to e