Dr. Cornelis Venema recently gave an address entitled and described as follows:
"Christ's Kingship in All of Life: 'Butchers, Bakers, and Candlestick Makers' in the Service of Christ"
The relation between Christ’s kingship and the calling of Christians to serve him in all of life poses an inescapable question: How are the citizens of Christ’s kingdom to be “in” but not “of” the world? Should Christian believers seek Christ’s kingdom in their daily vocations, in the areas of education and culture, or even in the “public square?” In his address, Dr. Venema will focus upon this question, and offer an evaluation of the recent “two-kingdoms/natural law” answer to it.
His lecture ( Lecture #2) was among a series of lectures on related topics given by Mid-America professors in April.
Highly recommended for a cogent Reformed response to the neo-2k movement:
Mid-America Resources
"Christ's Kingship in All of Life: 'Butchers, Bakers, and Candlestick Makers' in the Service of Christ"
The relation between Christ’s kingship and the calling of Christians to serve him in all of life poses an inescapable question: How are the citizens of Christ’s kingdom to be “in” but not “of” the world? Should Christian believers seek Christ’s kingdom in their daily vocations, in the areas of education and culture, or even in the “public square?” In his address, Dr. Venema will focus upon this question, and offer an evaluation of the recent “two-kingdoms/natural law” answer to it.
His lecture ( Lecture #2) was among a series of lectures on related topics given by Mid-America professors in April.
Highly recommended for a cogent Reformed response to the neo-2k movement:
Mid-America Resources