@HwsEleutheroi Been using AI to make a whole metal album for the book of Hebrews. As long as you give the AI the key points of the text it does well. I think Tad ai is better than suno when it comes to a variety of genres. Check this out
https://t.co/rLsrg4c4x3
🚨 COOLEST GIVEAWAY EVER! 📜
I am giving away one of @WesleyLHuff ’s P52 New Testament Manuscript Replicas.
Entering is simple. Just…
• Follow @JoshuaBarzon & @WesleyLHuff
• Like & Share the post
• Tag someone below
I’ll pick the winner a week from today on 4/17/26.
🚨 COOLEST GIVEAWAY EVER! 📜
I am giving away one of @WesleyLHuff ’s P52 New Testament Manuscript Replicas.
Entering is simple. Just…
• Follow @JoshuaBarzon & @WesleyLHuff
• Like & Share the post
• Tag someone below
I’ll pick the winner a week from today on 4/17/26.
@AestheticGamer1 Maybe Leon was researching a cure for his disease and he located this doctor who convinced him he could cure him
Leon set up the appointment, but was deceived as to the nature of the doctor.
It's a Reformation Day GIVEAWAY! The winner will receive the Institutes of Elenctic Theology 3-Volume Set by Francis Turretin.
How to enter:
1. Follow us
2. Like AND repost
3. Tag a friend
4. Subscribe to our newsletter: https://t.co/vG4xSFjiNJ
Winner will be announced Friday!
📣 GIVEAWAY 🎉
We are close! @CenterClassical meets November 17 in Boston. Register asap to hear Adonis Vidu and Lewis Ayres: https://t.co/F4Xx8xbODA
To get you ready, our sponsor @crossway is giving away one set of Stephen Charnock today! To win, LIKE and RETWEET.
HUGE GIVEAWAY! 📦🤝
Be the first to own my new study Bible, Connecting Scripture New Testament.
I've got a few copies in my possession, though it doesn't release until 10/15.
Follow my account and repost for a chance to win.
💥Book Giveaway💥
Like, Repost, and Follow for a chance to win:
The Works of William Perkins from @RHB_Books!
And don't forget you can use the code "credo" at https://t.co/rWQ1mXTuP0 to recieve a 10% discount on your order!
🚨GIVEAWAY TIME🚨
Like and comment “I’m a Baptist” for a chance to win @JacobTanner1689’s book, a @FoundersMin leather bookmark, signature coffee mug and a bag of Squirrelly Joe’s Coffee!
We would also appreciate a retweet😉
💥BOOK GIVEAWAY!💥
Like, Repost, Follow for a chance to win:
On Classical Trinitarianism, ed. by @MattMBarrett w/@ivpacademic, includes 40 Theologians recovering Nicaea!
@TGC 2024 Book Award in Theological Studies! https://t.co/fWs3cfdpbM
💥 GIVEAWAY 💥
*Proclaiming the Triune God* just released! And we are giving away SEVERAL COPIES. @MattMBarrett, @samuel_parkison, @RonniKurtz, and Lanier are proof you can preach the Trinity of Nicaea to your church.
To win, LIKE, FOLLOW, and RETWEET. https://t.co/CvGrHKPKsR
🎉GIVEAWAY 🎉
Today *On Classical Trinitarianism* @ivpacademic releases! Over 4O Theologians retrieving Nicaea. https://t.co/RNWR5pojN1 Win this copy! LIKE. FOLLOW. RETWEET.
Here are a few endorsements:
"One will be hard-pressed to find a more comprehensive explanation of trinitarian doctrine than this collection of essays. Matthew Barrett has assembled a prestigious team of scholars to explain what the Trinity is and why it still matters. On Classical Trinitarianism is an outstanding achievement in modern scholarship on the Christian doctrine of God."
-@mbird12 Michael Bird, deputy principal at Ridley College in Melbourne, Australia and author of A Bird's-Eye View of Luke and Acts
"On Classical Trinitarianism is a breathtaking accomplishment. An astonishing array of contributions maps the field of trinitarian theology—historical, dogmatic, and polemical. The forty chapters, written by prominent theologians from each of three major branches of the church, are a major refutation of the so-called revival of the Trinity in twentieth-century theology. This publication is a serious, in-depth reassertion of classical Nicene theology over against the recent onslaught of social trinitarianism with its rationally comprehensible and compositional (and, often, subordinationist) view of the Trinity. Anyone attempting a return to the social trinitarianism of the previous century will have to reckon with Matthew Barrett's major accomplishment in this volume."
-Hans Boersma, the Order of St. Benedict Servants of Christ Chair in Ascetical Theology at Nashotah House Theological Seminary, Wisconsin
"Evangelical retrieval of classical trinitarianism is a vital project. This massive resource represents various approaches and levels of polemical intensity along with a core set of convictions. I can't believe I read the whole thing! But its many fine essays convey valuable insights, sound some necessary alarms, and pose enduring questions."
-Daniel J. Treier, Gunther H. Knoedler Professor of Theology and PhD program director at Wheaton College
"This admirable book makes the rediscovery of trinitarian theology truly exciting. After showing the struggles of the early Fathers for an adequate terminology to express the mystery of the Trinity, it carefully traces the history of the doctrine. The book also provides a healthy corrective to the many ways that contemporary theology has strayed from the tradition of Nicaea." -Michael J. Dodds, OP, professor of theology at the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, California "With a wide variety of historical, dogmatic, and critical essays, this book invites and equips its readers to join the revival of classical trinitarian theism."
-Michael Gorman, professor of philosophy at The Catholic University of America
"Like a meteor on the scene of contemporary theology, Matthew Barrett's edited volume, On Classical Trinitarianism, makes a big impression. Physically, it is a massive book, full of hefty articles by many of the world's leading theologians. Intellectually, it is an equally massive response to recent innovations in the doctrine of God—from social trinitarianism to eternal functional subordinationism—in favor of orthodox trinitarian theology and its attendant doctrine of divine simplicity. It is also a reminder of the importance of thinking with ecclesial tradition and of the corresponding dangers, when talking about the profoundest of mysteries, of trying to think about God apart from it—lest even Christians forget that they are trinitarian monotheists and that God is simply Father, Son, and Spirit."
-John Betz, associate professor of systematic theology at the University of Notre Dame
"Matthew Barrett's remarkable collection shows evangelicalism getting its doctrinal house in order, but its importance also lies well outside evangelicalism as an ecumenical collection: in authorship, mood, method, and—most of all—common confession of the Nicene faith. Everything we could wish for is here in abundance: attention to the Bible, history, doctrine, texts, figures, and vocabulary. Like some collection of glorious music or poetry offered on the anniversary of a beloved monarch as a 'garland,' On Classical Trinitarianism is a magnificent garland in honor of the Nicene Creed after seventeen centuries."
-@AP_Davison, Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford
"This is a marvelous primer on the church's historic understanding of the Trinity. Its topics and authors have been very well chosen. May God use it to renew our discipleship today, growing everyone who reads it in the knowledge and love of God."
-Douglas A. Sweeney, dean of Beeson Divinity School at Samford University
"On Classical Trinitarianism is the most significant text published this year, if not this century. While a trinitarian renaissance certainly began in the twentieth century, distinctly modern and postmodern echoes of ancient heresies arose to challenge believers who seek to restate with integrity for our day 'the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints' (Jude 1:3). The scholars herein, wisely gathered by Matthew Barrett, not only represent a wide spectrum of Christian tradition but offer deep studies into orthodoxy's exegetical and historical basis and helpfully describe the contours of this indispensable dogma. Renewing our understanding of God the Trinity so that we may worship him truly and confess him properly will be the best way to celebrate the signal accomplishment of Nicaea. So, please, take up and read!"
-@MusingsOnChrist Malcolm Yarnell, research professor of theology at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
"On Classical Trinitarianism presents not a 'Nicene option' but the Nicene necessity . Against the revisionism of some of the most popular trinitarian theologians of the last fifty years, a team of mature theologians makes the definitive case that Nicaea's trinitarian theology is materially necessary for a biblical, evangelical, catholic, and orthodox faith. This is the best kind of polemic—one in which the positive vision outshines the object of critique." Matt Jenson, professor of theology at Torrey Honors College at Biola University "Matthew Barrett has compiled the perfect guest list of authors to celebrate the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. This is the perfect textbook for learning the biblical and trinitarian grammar of God—and for learning why retrieving classical trinitarianism matters more than ever."
-@VanhoozerKevin, research professor of systematic theology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
"The essays in this collection, individually and collectively, offer a comprehensive account of that fundamental doctrine of the Christian faith, the mystery of the Trinity. Attempts by some theologians to squeeze and crush that mystery into a new scholasticism of expectations have to be deflected, pushed back, from within a robust appreciation of what we have been given in good faith and hope. Contemporary theology has replaced the burden of false histories by a bondage to the future. Our faith has become suspended between the past and the future. Our memory of that faith has sometimes become weak and patchy, and wherever memory fades, so too does Christian identity. Here in these essays, new voices of classical Christianity are giving us the means to bring 'what has been' together with 'what we are now'; with this collection we have been given an opportunity to act, to live within our faith today and grow in devotion. The essays in On Classical Trinitarianism deserve to be recognized as signs that there still is a right path: that hard-earned scholarship can still point the way for those who seek direction or strengthening. In these essays, the reader finds the fundamental doctrine of Christian faith—God existing in the reality of Trinity—received, remembered, and given energy and clarity. The result is a diverse collection of insights, explorations, and renewal that remains true to the authentic history of Christian faith seeking understanding. Reading these essays, you will recognize both true scholarship at work and the present fruits of the Spirit."
-Michel Rene Barnes, associate professor emeritus of theology at Marquette University
"Controversy, in the hand of our triune God, drives the church into deeper clarity concerning its beliefs. That proved true in the Arian controversy that produced the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed. It has also proven true in the modern evangelical controversy over the doctrine of the Trinity, and On Classical Trinitarianism is strong evidence of that deepening clarity. Matthew Barrett has brought together forty essays by trinitarian scholars that explore the lofty theological mountain peaks of the Trinity, the eternal generation of the Son, the spiration of the Holy Spirit, God's simplicity, aseity, and impassibility, and inseparable operations. Such doctrines require hard thinking, and this is not a book for the intellectually faint of heart, but the fruit of such profound theology is magnificent doxology as we bow before the incomprehensible mystery of our infinite Creator and Redeemer."
-@JoelBeeke, professor of homiletics and systematic theology at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary in Grand Rapids, Michigan
"The Trinity gives coherence to Christian faith and life. While multiauthor volumes often lack coherence, a beautifully biblical and classically catholic vision of the Trinity draws these contributors together. Presenting a positive, and overwhelmingly persuasive, depiction of ideas such as divine simplicity, processions, missions, and appropriations, this book has potential to change permanently how many modern Christians think about the Trinity. Though it is likely naive to hope that this will be the case, this material should kill and bury any notion of subordination in the Trinity, showing that such dead ideas are incompatible with the living faith of the church. A lot remains at stake in trinitarian theology, and this volume goes a long way toward illustrating why and how."
-Ryan M. McGraw, Morton H. Smith Professor of Systematic Theology at Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary
🚨Book Giveaway🚨
📸Like, Repost, Follow for a chance to win:
“Covenant Theology” in which Michael Allen is a contributor. @crossway
Register to hear Allen in San Diego (night before ETS). https://t.co/xPqjOzbOGP
Just over one month away from the release of The All-Encompassing Return of Christ, and would love for you to download and take a look at the study guide. Feel free to share it with your church small group or Bible study to learn how it might be useful.
🌐 https://t.co/3Mj8pMUrSi
Man with a suspended license zooms in for his suspended license court hearing while driving with a suspended license and it is an absolute masterpiece.