Combatting Self-Salvation: An Insight into the Early Creeds

When theological questions regarding the trinity and the deity of Christ arose in the early church, they responded with written creeds, and it was these statements of orthodoxy which guarded the gospel of grace.
3.15 Tom J. Nettles, David Schrock, Stephen Wellum • Interview • “The Good Confession: Why Southern Baptists Would Do Well to Embrace Their Confession”

Listen in as Tom Nettles joins David Schrock and Stephen Wellum to discuss his longform essay “The Good Confession: Why Southern Baptists Would Do Well to Embrace Their Confession.”
Four Vital Areas of Doctrine for Clear Christian Confession

A faithful confession requires clarity in at least four areas: historic biblical orthodoxy, soteriology, the necessity of confessing, and ecclesiology. To remove any of these foundational blocks risks toppling the tower.
3.13 Carl Trueman, David Schrock, Stephen Wellum • Interview • “Creeds and Confessions”

Listen in as Carl Trueman joins David Schrock and Stephen Wellum to discuss the importance of creeds and confessions in the church.
3.12 Tom J. Nettles • Reading • “The Good Confession: Why Southern Baptists Would Do Well to Embrace Their Confession”

Why should Southern Baptists embrace their confession? Here are four good reasons.
The Good Confession: Why Southern Baptists Would Do Well to Embrace Their Confession

Why should Southern Baptists embrace their confession? Here are four good reasons.
3.11 Michael A.G. Haykin, David Schrock, Stephen Wellum • Interview • “Baptists, A Confessional People”

Listen in as David Schrock and Stephen Wellum interview church historian Michael Haykin on his longform essay “Baptists, A Confessional People.”
The Perils of Procrustean Triage: Redefining the Debate on Women’s Ordination

Theological triage is a helpful category for considering cooperation amongst friends. However, we also need other categories to guard against destructive doctrine.
A Time-Tested Compass Pointing to True North: The 1689 Second London Baptist Confession

Written in response to heterodox teaching, the 1689 London Baptist Confession is still a faithful guide for the church today.
3.10 Michael A.G. Haykin • Reading • “Baptists, A Confessional People”

Historically, Baptists have been a people committed to the authority of Scripture. This very commitment to the Bible has also led Baptists to be a confessional people.
Baptists, A Confessional People

Historically, Baptists have been a people committed to the authority of Scripture. This very commitment to the Bible has also led Baptists to be a confessional people.