Denver Clark

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Denver Clark

Denver Clark

@chariotsofiron

Christian, husband, father, saved by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, to the glory of God alone. Sola Scriptura.

USA 加入时间 Kasım 2020
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
“God may, through Christ, pardon the greatest sinner without any prejudice to the honor of His majesty. The honor of the divine majesty indeed requires satisfaction, but the sufferings of Christ fully repair the injury.” - Jonathan Edwards
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@megbasham @HwsEleutheroi @HwsEleutheroi is the best apologist I’ve listened to because he takes great care to accurately represent the other side & all of his responses are grounded in the Scriptures. Both of these are vitally important. I hope you will be as blessed as I have been from his ministry.
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𝔚𝔥𝔦𝔱𝔢𝔅𝔢𝔞𝔯𝔡
You mean a video series specifically on Roman Catholic claims? I've done about fifty debates against their leading apologists back to 1990, and we have gone pretty in-depth on the Papacy, Mass, priesthoods, scriptural authority, over the years. Our website now has a page that allows you to search like 3,000 Dividing Line episodes by key word. Sorta depends on what specific topic you are looking at.
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@virgilwalker “Pray, then, in this way: ‘Our Father who is in heaven,
Hallowed be Your name. Your kingdom come.
Your will be done,
On earth as it is in heaven.” We have multitudes of believers who neglect to pray in this way. Probably because they have an eschatology of defeat.
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Virgil L. Walker
Virgil L. Walker@virgilwalker·
Biblical illiteracy is destroying the Church. What’s ONE verse you wish every Christian knew and obeyed right now? Drop it below and tell me why.
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
The material by James B Jordan on my Canon+ app is worth its weight in gold. I just finished “The Mission of God in History Conference” (4-Part Series). Wow. Just wow. Unbelievably good. canonplus.com/tabs/watch/aud…
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@PLeithart Do you see the parables of the treasure in the field pearl of great price with Jesus as the treasure & pearl with us selling all we have to buy Him or is the world the treasure & pearl & He is the one selling all to buy the world?
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Peter Leithart
Peter Leithart@PLeithart·
Many of Jesus’ parables are about the agricultural cycle: sowing, growing, bearing fruit, harvest. For those with eyes to see, creation discloses the secrets of the kingdom of God. In the first instance, these natural cycles disclose Jesus Himself: He’s the sower, the seed that goes into the ground to die, the springing plant that bears fruit a hundredfold.
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Denver Clark 已转推
Buitengebieden
Buitengebieden@buitengebieden·
Wait for the puppy.. 😅
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
I've read two of John MacArthur's books on the end times, purchased the entire set of expository sermons on Revelation by Jeff Noblit and have read books / listened to sermons by many others over the years on this subject. Obviously, you don't need to listen to sermons on the book of Revelation to be continually exposed to preachers' end-times beliefs because this subject is unavoidable in countless sections of the Scriptures.  I have recently listened to (for free on Spotify) & then read, David Chilton's book, "Paradise Restored." This brief excerpt articulates my exact observations / reflections from listening to and reading others express their views on eschatology. “I began my personal journey toward the eschatology of dominion one evening in church, about a dozen years ago. The pastor, a preacher famous for his expository method of Bible teaching, had just begun a series on prophecy. As he eloquently defended his eschatology of defeat, I was struck by the fact that he seemed utterly unable to develop his views organically from the Bible. Oh, he quoted some Scripture—a verse here, a verse there. But he was never able to show that his explanation of the future fit in with the overall pattern of the Bible. In other words, he was very adept at imposing his views of reality upon the Biblical text, making sure his verses were shuffled together in the proper order. But he could not show how his doctrines flowed out of Scripture; his eschatology did not seem to be an organic part of the Story which the Bible tells.  What I began to realize that night was that the way to recover the Biblical eschatology must be through an understanding of the Biblical Story. Instead of trying to fit the Bible into a prearranged pattern, we must try to discover the patterns that are already there. We must allow the Bible’s own structure to arise from the text itself, to impose itself upon our own understanding. We must become accustomed to the Biblical vocabulary and modes of expression, seeking to shape our own thinking in terms of Scriptural categories.”
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
This post is full of truth & it is beautifully written. Praying for our brothers & sisters in Christ who live in Canada. Also, is this coming to America soon?
Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC)@crechurches

March 29, 2026 In light of the House of Commons passing third reading and adoption of Bill C-9, Boniface Presbytery of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches makes the following statement. Until Bill C-9, the Criminal Code of Canada recognized a good-faith religious-speech defence, which protected religious leaders who, in the course of their duties, taught from Scripture on matters of morality. That protection has now been stripped away. Under this bill, a pastor who reads Romans 1 from the pulpit and applies it to his congregation could, in principle, face criminal prosecution. Religious leaders across the country have raised the alarm, and they are right to do so. The Bible is not hate literature. It is a love letter. The movement of Scripture, from creation to fall to redemption to consummation, is the story of a God who refuses to abandon the creatures he has made. “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him” (John 3:16–17). That is the point of the entire Bible. God made the world. God loves the world. God entered the world to rescue it. If that is hatred, then the word has lost all meaning. Yes, the Bible identifies a problem. The problem is sin. God created the earth as a home for man, a place of beauty, order, worship, and communion. He placed Adam in the garden, gave him a mission, gave him a bride, and walked with him in the cool of the day. And man rebelled. We hated God. We sought to remove him from his throne and seat ourselves upon it. We wanted autonomy, self-rule, the right to define good and evil on our own terms. The consequence of that rebellion is death. “The wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23). This is not the language of hatred. It is a diagnosis. A doctor who tells you that you have cancer is not expressing hostility toward you. He is telling you the truth so that you might seek treatment. But God. Those two words are the hinge of all history. We rebelled, but God did not leave us in our rebellion. He sent his Son into the world to rescue us from ourselves. Christ took on human flesh, lived the life we could not live, died the death we deserved to die, and rose again so that we might live in communion with the Father forever. “But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ” (Eph 2:4–5). The gospel is the announcement that the God we hated has loved us anyway, and that he offers life to everyone who will receive it. And that means repentance. The gospel calls men, women, and children to turn from their sin and trust in Christ. This is where the accusation of hatred always lands, because repentance requires that we name sin as sin. The modern world can tolerate a God who affirms and validates sin. It cannot tolerate a God who says, “You are wrong, you must turn around and forsake your sin.” But a God who never corrects is a God who does not love. “For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives” (Heb 12:6). The call to repentance is the most loving thing the church can speak to a dying and dead world, because it is the only message that leads to life. Herod understood this, and he hated it. John the Baptist told Herod plainly, “It is not lawful for you to have your brother’s wife” (Mark 6:18). John was not promoting hatred against Herod. He was expressing the love of God to Herod, telling the king the truth about his sin so that the king might repent and live. Herod had a choice: receive the word and repent, or silence the messenger. He silenced the messenger. He had John arrested and beheaded because he preferred his sin over God. He preferred death over life. He preferred hatred over love. But the world called John the hater and Herod the victim. The pattern has repeated itself across the centuries. The church speaks, the world rages, and the church is accused of hatred. The real haters, of course, are those who love their sin more than they love God, who prefer the darkness to the light, suppress the lovers of life and congratulate themselves for their tolerance. Jeremiah was thrown into a pit. Jesus was crucified. Stephen was stoned. Paul was beaten, imprisoned, and beheaded. In every generation, the messengers of life are accused of hatred by the enemies of life. The accusation is not new. People can and do misread the Bible. Every heresy in the history of the church has claimed biblical warrant. Men have twisted Scripture to justify tyranny, hatred, and every kind of evil. We grant all of this freely. But the problem of misinterpretation lies with the reader, not with the text. A man who reads the Bible and concludes that it authorizes him to hate his neighbour has not understood the Bible. He has contradicted it. “You shall love your neighbour as yourself” (Matt 22:39) is not ambiguous. You do not ban the book because some readers are fools. You do not criminalize the message because some messengers are frauds. Let me state the obvious: the church rejects hatred, intimidation, and violence against any person, as those terms have been traditionally and rightly defined. Every human being is made in the image of God (Gen 1:27), and that fact confers a dignity that no parliament can grant and no parliament may rescind. We affirm without reservation that all people are to be treated with the dignity that belongs to them as God’s image-bearers. The preaching of repentance does not contradict this affirmation. It flows from it. Precisely because every human being bears the image of God, the church owes him the truth about his sin and the remedy God has provided for it. To withhold that truth is not love, but hatred. The Bible is not hate literature. It is the only book in the world that tells you the truth about your condition and offers you a remedy in the same breath. “You are a sinner,” and “God loves you and sent his Son to save you from your sin.” That is not hatred. That is grace. The real hatred is the spirit that suppresses this message, that would rather let men perish in their sins than permit someone to call them to repentance. The real hatred calls love a crime and calls repentance an offence. Should Bill C-9 ever be used against a Christian who loves his neighbour enough to tell him the truth, the state will not have punished hatred. It will have committed it. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees freedom of conscience and religion, freedom of thought, belief, opinion, and expression (s. 2). These are not privileges the state extends at its discretion. They are fundamental freedoms, recognized as belonging to every Canadian. Bill C-9 contravenes both the word and the spirit of the Charter. A law that exposes faithful Christian teaching to criminal sanction does not protect anyone. It suppresses the free exercise of religion in precisely the manner the Charter was written to prevent. The church that preaches God’s Word must receive the state’s protection, as the Belgic Confession (1561) rightly declares: Their task of restraining and sustaining is not limited to the public order but includes the protection of the church and its ministry in order that all idolatry and false worship may be removed and prevented; that the kingdom of antichrist may be destroyed and the kingdom of Christ promoted. They must, therefore, countenance the preaching of the word of the Gospel everywhere, that God may be honoured and worshipped by everyone, as he commands in his Word. Consequently, Boniface Presbytery calls upon all leaders in Canada, whether elected or appointed, whether legislative, judicial, or executive, whether local or national, to defend the preaching of the Word of God everywhere. In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen. Rev. Garry Vanderveen Presiding Minister, Boniface Presbytery

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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@JeffTaylorLR I just received his book, “Images of the Spirit” this week & was foolishly thinking I could devour it in a day or two. Didn’t realize he plunges you into such deep waters right out of the gate. It’s taken me three days to digest chapter one. 🙂
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Jeff Taylor
Jeff Taylor@JeffTaylorLR·
Kline’s uniqueness wasn’t just in what he argued but in the architecture he saw. Others debated ethics, politics, or exegesis. Kline re‑drew the map. He located every doctrine inside a federal, covenantal, and eschatological structure that most theologians never even realized existed. That’s why you can’t “update” him. His whole system is load‑bearing. #MeredithGKline
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@joe_rigney This is horrifying. We are clearly experiencing the wrath of God as He is giving us over to our sin. All believers need to be fervently praying for revival.
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@MunsterDoug @Life_truthway He was crucified on Friday. Their word for “Friday” was “Preparation Day”. And there’s this: ⬇️ “….Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things happened.” - Luke 24:21
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Doug
Doug@MunsterDoug·
This begins with the premise that Jesus was crucified on a Friday. A search was done for Passovers that fell on a Friday. Biased search with biased results. Passover was on a Wednesday in 30 AD. That's when Jesus was crucified. That's the only way you can get 3 days and 3 nights in the tomb.
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Life Truth Way
Life Truth Way@Life_truthway·
The Exact Year,Month,Day and Hour when Jesus Died.
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Theopolis Institute
Theopolis Institute@_Theopolis·
The gospel isn't an apolitical message that happens to have political implications. It’s not a message of private salvation with downstream public consequences. Exactly the opposite. The gospel is public and political truth with personal consequences. All the vocabulary of the gospel is political. The Greek word for “gospel” – euaggelion, the word from which we derive “evangelical” – refers to a royal proclamation of victory. Jesus is “Christ,” the “anointed one,” which is a royal title. Jesus the Anointed One comes preaching, “Repent, for the kingdom of God is here.” Jesus is King: That is the gospel. God raised Him up to be Lord and Anointed One. Jesus came as the son of David to reign from a heavenly throne. That political declaration has a personal import. If you’ve been baptized, you’re a subject of King Jesus. You must trust Him, be loyal to Him, obey His commands. You don’t belong to yourself. You can’t live any way you please. You're His man, His woman. Live like it. - Peter Leithart theopolisinstitute.com/leithart_post/…
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@iamrjknight Hey brother, what is your understanding of what “the day of the Lord” is referring to in this passage?
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Jeremiah Knight
Jeremiah Knight@iamrjknight·
When Paul wrote 2 Thessalonians 2 he was correcting a specific misunderstanding in the church. Some believers thought the day of the Lord had already come. Paul explains that certain events must occur first, including the revealing of the “man of lawlessness” (2 Thessalonians 2:3). Many assume that when Paul says this man “takes his seat in the temple of God” it must mean a rebuilt temple in Jerusalem (2 Thessalonians 2:4). But the New Testament repeatedly teaches that under the New Covenant the temple of God is no longer a building. The temple is the people of God. Paul himself says this very clearly elsewhere. “Do you not know that you are a temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?” (1 Corinthians 3:16). Again he writes, “We are the temple of the living God” (2 Corinthians 6:16). The church is also described as “a holy temple in the Lord” built together as God’s dwelling (Ephesians 2:21–22). So when Paul speaks of someone exalting himself in the temple of God, the most natural New Testament meaning is someone exalting himself within the sphere of God’s people, claiming divine authority and deceiving many. This fits Paul’s warning about deception within the visible church. “The mystery of lawlessness is already at work” (2 Thessalonians 2:7). Scripture elsewhere warns about false teachers and false christs arising among those who profess faith. Jesus warned, “Many false prophets will arise and will mislead many” (Matthew 24:11). Paul told the elders in Ephesus that “from among your own selves men will arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them” (Acts 20:30). None of this requires a future temple to be built. In fact the New Testament emphasizes that the old temple system has passed away because Christ is the final sacrifice and the true meeting place between God and man (Hebrews 10:10–14; John 2:19–21). The physical temple itself was destroyed in AD 70 exactly as Jesus foretold (Matthew 24:2). So the warning in 2 Thessalonians 2 is not meant to send believers looking for construction in Jerusalem. It is a warning about deception, false authority, and rebellion against Christ appearing among those who claim to belong to God. The response Paul calls for is simple: stand firm in the truth of the gospel. “Stand firm and hold to the teachings which you were taught” (2 Thessalonians 2:15).
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
@canonpress, I clicked the link to this video with a “Thank you, Lord” in my heart because the arguments from Scripture by these people make are compelling & I now find myself wrestling with this long held doctrine. I love @douglaswils & have been tremendously blessed from the numerous hours listening to his sermons & reading his books. That said, I cannot express how deeply disappointing this video was for me. It was actually a kick in the gut. If this video demonstrates that this is the depth of thinking we’ve all put into this topic then it gives even more weight to the other side. A lot of weight. If you’re going to engage the topic then please demonstrate that you’ve taken the time to listen to what the other side is saying. You discredit yourself when you do otherwise. I genuinely ask you to please do better.
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Denver Clark
Denver Clark@chariotsofiron·
“For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened. Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.” - Romans 1:19-23
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Randall Carlson
Randall Carlson@randallwcarlson·
The universe appears to operate with intelligence. What that actually means is almost beyond comprehension - but the mathematics make it difficult to dismiss. Consider the parameters required for higher life to emerge at all. The range is extraordinarily narrow - gravitational constants, orbital distances, atmospheric composition, stellar stability. Shift any one of them fractionally and the chain breaks. Our solar system sits within all of them simultaneously. The speaker frames it simply. Even approaching this as a committed atheist, with no interest in theological conclusions, the data leads to an uncomfortable place. This solar system is not just fortunate. It is statistically extraordinary - precisely calibrated, across dozens of independent variables, to allow life not only to emerge from single-celled organisms, but to develop all the way to conscious, self-aware beings asking the question of how they got here. That precision demands an explanation. And the honest answer is that we don't yet have one.
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thatbrian
thatbrian@Thatbrian·
The PostMil fantasy can't handle this news:
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