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Prayer and the Will of God -- Part Two
This is part two of our very brief look at prayer. It will also be the last blog of 2025. I will return to this space in January of 2026. [Don't forget to subscribe so you don't miss a blog.] In my previous blog I outlined a brief theology of prayer and what we can expect when we pray. In this blog I want to draw a few conclusions based on what we learned. There are a lot of conclusions we could draw but I will only make a few here. The first conclusion I need to draw is base

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Nov 28, 20255 min read


BOOK REVIEW: Uncomfortable: The Awkward and Essential Challenge of Christian Community by Brett McCracken
Brett McCracken may be a new name to some of you but he has been writing books and articles for the Gospel Coalition, where he is the senior editor and director of communications, for some time. This book is, in fact, almost 10 years old. But that does not make it irrelevant. In fact, what he speaks about has been and will continue to be an issue within the church until Christ comes again -- the local church is a necessary, though not perfect, and often uncomfortable place to

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Nov 21, 20254 min read


Prayer and the Will of God -- Part One
The men have just finished discussing the Reformation Triangle for spiritual formation in our Men’s Theology book, A Heart Aflame for God: A Reformed Approach to Spiritual Formation by Matthew Bingham. I’ll spare you the details (ask a man in the church for them if you like) but the triangle includes Scripture, meditation, and prayer. The topic of prayer has been on my mind for some time and our discussion of Tuesday night got me thinking that I should write about it. [I wil

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Nov 14, 20255 min read


MORE THAN A BOOK REVIEW: Two Books on Mental Health
Mental health issues have become part of the zeitgeist of our culture. We are bombarded with labels, diagnoses, and drugs and therapies to respond to them. Sadly too many Christians are too quick to embrace secular culture and secular brain science without filtering what they are being told through the truth of God’s word. Thankfully there are many very good resources from a Reformed perspective which will help us sort out the ever-present mental health obsession of our Weste

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Nov 7, 20256 min read


GUEST BLOGGER: Where We Must Begin
NOTE: I have invited the contributions of Stu Reimer to write in this space on the issues of marriage and family. If you follow CRC at all you will know Stu to be my frequent substitute in the pulpit and I am looking forward to his work as my substitute from time to time in this space. Expect his blogs to appear every 6 weeks or so. Stu is no expert on the things on which I have asked him to write (Just ask his wife and children), but he is a committed reformed Christian and

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Oct 31, 20254 min read


A Bit of Help Please
I really enjoy writing and podcasting as a part of my ministry at CRC (and beyond). But there are times the well of ideas runs a bit dry and I have trouble coming up with topics about which to write in the blog or talk about on the Here I Sit podcast. So I’m asking for a bit of help. If there is anything you would like me to discuss -- a bible passage, theological topic, social or ecclesiological movement, whatever -- follow the link below to send your idea to me. https://doc

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Oct 24, 20251 min read


Social Imaginary and the Gospel
I mentioned in an earlier blog that I spent some time this summer with Canada’s finest philosopher Charles Taylor. To be fair, he was nowhere to be found, but his massive tome, A Secular Age, was in my hands a lot over the warmer months of the year. I also mentioned in the previous blog that ‘Scripture alone should be the sole influencer of our social imaginary’ or something like that. I then said I would provide more information on this in a future blog… this is that blog. T

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Oct 17, 20255 min read


Redeeming Regret
I’m getting old. As I do I have less of life ahead of me to look forward to, and more of life behind me to look back upon. This creates a potential problem. Looking back can be a good thing -- recalling stories and experiences that bring joy -- but it can also be a bad thing -- recalling stories and experiences that bring regret. Regret is a powerful emotional and intellectual prison which binds us to the ‘what-if’s’ that our imagination creates as it looks backwards over the

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Oct 10, 20254 min read


The Light of Scripture
C. S. Lewis once quipped, “I believe in Christianity as I believe that the Sun has risen, not only because I see it but because by it, I see everything else.” It’s typical wit from Lewis but within this short repartee a very important truth emerges. It is one thing to believe that the sun has risen; it is a completely different thing to live by the light that it gives. The specific point Lewis was making in his article, “Is Theology Poetry?”, was that we know the truth of Chr

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Oct 3, 20253 min read


GUEST BLOGGER: Theology Applied
NOTE: I have invited the contributions of Stu Reimer to write in this space on the issues of marriage and family. If you follow CRC at...

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Sep 26, 20253 min read


BOOK REVIEW: Union with Christ: The Blessings of Being in Him By Sinclair Ferguson
In a future episode of the Here I Sit Podcast I will be diving into the much neglected but exceedingly important doctrine of Union with...

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Sep 19, 20253 min read


The Danger of Mission Drift OR Making the First Thing Second (or third or fourth or worse)
On Sunday I spoke about my greatest fear for my ministry and for our church -- Assumed Evangelicalism, or to put it in the vernacular,...

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Sep 12, 20255 min read


Do You Know What I Did Last Summer?
Probably not. So I’m going to fill you in. And while I do so I hope to give you a bit of insight into the yearly schedule I keep and why...

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Sep 5, 20255 min read


We're Back!!!
After a month of rest, preparation, and renewed focus I am back! And after a summer of the same for the church as a whole we are back as...

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Aug 30, 20253 min read


Ephesians 6:5-9: Bondservants and Masters
A few weeks ago I preached on Ephesians 6:1-4, which spoke to children regarding how they should obey and honour their parents and to...

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Jul 25, 20256 min read


The Foundation for Parenting
This past Sunday we looked at Ephesians 6:1-4. We heard Paul speak to both children and parents regarding their roles in the family. We...

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Jul 18, 20257 min read


BOOK REVIEW: Disciplines of a Godly Family by Kent and Barbara Hughes
Since we are in Ephesians 5-6 in our CRC sermon schedule, I thought we would take a look at two books, one related to marriage, which we...

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Jul 11, 20254 min read


BOOK REVIEW: When Sinners Say I Do: Discovering the Power of the Gospel for Marriage by Dave Harvey
Since we are in Ephesians 5-6 I thought we would take a look at two books over the next two weeks. One on marriage, the other on family....

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Jul 4, 20253 min read


GUEST BLOGGER: Children: Easy to Love, Harder to Like?
NOTE: I have invited the contributions of Stu Reimer to write in this space on the issues of marriage and family. If you follow CRC at...

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Jun 27, 20255 min read


Complementarianism Revisited
At CRC we are nearing the end of our look at the Epistle to the Ephesians. We find ourselves, at the moment, right in the middle of...

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Jun 20, 20253 min read
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