fbpx

News Articles by R. Albert Mohler Jr

Sort by:
Filter by Resource Type:
Filter Options »
Filter by Topic:
Filter by Scripture:
Filter by Series:
Filter by Event:
Filter by Media Format:

FIRST-PERSON: Nineveh, New Orleans, & the City of Man

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--"Cities do not last. Those built in precarious places collapse. The rest are doomed to decay or suffer humanly induced destruction." That is the assessment of historian Felipe Fernandez Arnesto. He spoke those words with reference to New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, but his historical judgment would well apply to Nineveh, Tyre, Babylon and a host of cities long ago covered with dust.

FIRST-PERSON: Henry leaves a still-unfolding legacy

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--"Everyone has a theology," Carl F. H. Henry wrote. "It may be a very shoddy one, and if it is shoddy, it will rise to haunt one in a crisis of life. It's my conviction that only a theology which has the living God at its center and that is rooted in Christ, the crucified and risen Redeemer, has the intellectual struts to engage the modern secular views effectively."

FIRST-PERSON:
Carl Henry, theologian, leaves a still-unfolding legacy

Click to download Hi-ResPhoto
Carl F. H. Henry

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--"Everyone has a theology," Carl F. H. Henry wrote. "It may be a very shoddy one, and if it is shoddy, it will rise to haunt one in a crisis of life. It's my conviction that only a theology which has the living God at its center and that is rooted in Christ, the crucified and risen Redeemer, has the intellectual struts to engage the modern secular views effectively."
      Carl Henry, who died in his sleep Dec. 7, devoted his long and illustrious career as a theologian to building and defending the "intellectual struts" of evangelical theology. His death at age 90 closes an important chapter in the history of American evangelicalism -- and raises anew the great questions with which he struggled. Among those questions was one he revisited time and time again: Will evangelicalism remain recognizably evangelical?