What Is Justifying Grace
What is justifying grace? Dr. Chuck Gutenson here discusses this ever important part of the order of salvation. View our growing playlist of Seven Minute Seminary here.
What is justifying grace? Dr. Chuck Gutenson here discusses this ever important part of the order of salvation. View our growing playlist of Seven Minute Seminary here.
Dr. Charles Gutenson here discusses what happens as the Holy Spirit convicts a person of their need for salvation. View our growing playlist of Seven Minute Seminary here.
Dr. Chuck Gutenson on Prevenient Grace and its place in the Order of Salvation as understood by John Wesley. View our growing playlist of Seven Minute Seminary here. See our Primer on Prevenient Grace.
A common criticism of Wesley’s theology, especially from those of a more Calvinist inclination, is that it grounds salvation not on grace but human decision. This is, to put it bluntly, a false claim —
Dr. Charles Gutenson here outlines John Wesley’s order of salvation—that work of God which begins with prevenient grace and ends with glorifying grace. View our growing playlist of Seven Minute Seminary here.
On this day, in honor of the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., we post a letter of John Wesley to the 18th century abolitionist William Wilberforce. As an exercise of the imagination,
With the proliferation of churches in Singapore, why am I still a Methodist? It is not just because I am a Methodist pastor by profession, since there are pastors who have moved across churches and
In what ways could those who cherish the Wesleyan heritage take the Wesleys’s commitment to societal change from memory and memorial to an actualized movement? Certainly there are many ways, but one in particular stands
In part 1 of the series, we wrote about the mission side of Wesley’s crystal-clear vision. His mission was to save souls for Christ. In part two, we explore Wesley’s similarly clear strategy to accomplish
Caleb Friedeman’s recent post titled “Eight Things Wesleyans Could Learn from Neo-Calvinists” seemed to be right and true. It got me thinking, however, about the abundance of distinctive Wesleyan doctrinal tenants that we hold either
Clarity of mission and strategy is vital for your ministry. The tension between increasing needs and decreasing resources can tempt pastors into a ministry model where success is about meeting felt needs, keeping the status
I’m a Wesleyan. Always have been, always will be. However, as I look across the landscape of American evangelicalism, it’s hard to escape the fact that something new and exciting is happening in the Calvinist