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LATEST MAGAZINE ISSUE
Our Common Confession
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Westminster Theological Seminary
Joy Woo (MAR, Westminster) lives in the Philadelphia area with her husband, where she works at a local Christian school.
"The opacity of heaven’s glory is ever so slightly made more translucent as the faces of its residents are revealed to me through the window that death provides."
Read this reflection on the trials of Naomi and how those trials can inform our hope in Christ.
"You are in the middle of a battle..."
A reflection on the assurance of salvation
Hongsik Woo is currently an MDiv student at Westminster Theological Seminary, and administrative and research assistant at the Craig Center and Westminster Assembly Project.
Hongsik (Paul) Woo reviews Robert Covolo's 'Fashion Theology.'
Seeking long-lasting joy rather than mere, short-lived happiness
"Rest, recreation, and pleasure...God has created these for our joy."
Listen to Dr. Edmund P. Clowney expound on a Biblical understanding of art and aesthetics.
Honoring the emperor looks a lot like the humility of Christ, provided that our conscience is clean according to the word of God.
"To overcome the world ought to be the height of every man’s and woman’s ambition. Then there can be no misery but only joy in the truth of Christ."
Peter Christian Moore, (PhD, WTS) contributed a work of poetry to Westminster Magazine 6.1.
Nate Shannon, Associate Director of Global Curriculum & Assessment, and Adjunct Professor of Apologetics & Systematic Theology, discusses how teaching art--like all education--should direct children toward love and worship of God.
The 2020 winner of the Edgar Creative Writing Prize, awarded annually at Westminster.
This article was first presented in 1942 at Westminster Theological Seminary's "The Christian World Order" conference.
Edmund Clowney originally delivered this piece as a lecture in 1980 titled “Living Arts: Beauty and the Bible.” In it, Clowney draws out how the beauty of God’s creation is a reflection of his own beauty. The lecture was adapted and edited for print.
Christ alone is our sure anchor in the storms of life.
Rev. Dr. Peter Lillback (PhD, Westminster Theological Seminary) is president and professor of historical theology and church history at Westminster Theological Seminary. He also serves as the president emeritus and founder of The Providence Forum and senior editor of the new Unio cum Christo: An International Journal of Reformed Theology and Life.
Godly fatherhood aims to point others to the God who Fathers all.
When the ministry disappoints, set your heart on the things above.
A recent graduate of Westminster reflects on the Master of Divinity, and the fruit of his studies during this time.
Jacob Bier reviews Malcolm Guite's 'David's Crown'.
"Christ’s words to his disciples at the end of Matthew stand firmly upon an ancient and deep revelational bedrock."
Nate Shannon explores the global and theological roots of critical thinking.
Dr. Justin Poythress reflects on how Christmastime often brings the sharpest sense of disillusionment, and points to the Antidote and Answer for our sense of disappointment and loss.
When death haunts our minds, we can stare at the light of our destiny.
Apologetics often makes us think of argumentation, but what about the relation of those arguments to daily life? And how do argument and persuasion relate to each other?
Liberalism rejects the supernatural reality of true Christianity.
Pastor Eric Watkins reflects on his experiences as an adoptive father, and what it means to be adopted into the family of God.
Daniel Schrock reviews James Eglinton's Bavinck Biography
Dr. Alfred Poirier writes on how his experiences in the church displayed the necessity for creeds, and shares how the first creeds are found in Scripture.
"But the king of questions always steps ahead of the others, strong and silent: Who are you?"
"The trouble for God’s people has always been the same: God’s voice isn’t the only one receiving attention."