Showing 10 results for “standard bearer”
The Standard Bearer means to be a free witness of the Reformed truth. But what do we mean when, in this connection, we speak of the Reformed truth and of witnessing for it through the Standard Bearer? To be sure, by Reformed truth we mean the truth of Scripture as it is briefly and officially expres
Behind, and underneath, and in us must be God Himself. Otherwise we will not stand, and The Standard Bearer will do worse than faint. It will bear the lie rather than the standard of God's Word. May God keep our churches strong in the faith so that we may have a steadfast, abiding, vibrant standardb
The strength of a covenant family is the faith they share in common - a faith rooted in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. When a husband and wife, or when parents and children, share in a certain knowledge and an assured confidence that in life and death, both in body and soul, they belong to Jesu
The Standard Bearer has its own nature and purpose as determined by the origin of the magazine. The Standard Bearer first saw the light of day in October 1924 in connection with the controversy over common grace in the Christian Reformed Church. The first editor, Herman Hoeksema, and others, both mi
As to the nature of the question, we may notice that it views only one aspect of our Standard Bearer, that aspect which has to do with those who are outside the pale of our churches. The witness of our paper is certainly not only for them. By means of The Standard Bearer we surely intend to witness
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Standard Bearer, November 15, 1936 Editor's Note
Editor of the Standard Bearer
*Supplement to the Standard Bearer of July 1st, 1937
The Standard Bearer also is an excellent source of historical data. The first Standard Bearer appeared in October, 1924. Rev. Ophoff and Rev. Hoeksema were both on that first editorial staff. It is interesting to note that in that first Standard Bearer, “God is God” appeared as the title of an artic