Francisco Tourinho is a Brazilian Calvinist apologist. He described his theological credentials on my Facebook page: I have the respect of the academic This is my reply (3rd round, part 2) in an in-depth debate on justification and comparative soteriology, with Brazilian Reformed Baptist apologist Francisco Tourinho.
to try desperately to generate some sort of information to put some of the president s enemies in jail. i know this from personal experience. in some really sad way, i m not surprised with some of these revelations. jeff sessions first and then william barr. norm, the idea of, well, this is what the government does, no. this is not the same thing as going after congressman matt gaetz for alleged behavior where you have proof, this is an investigation in search of a crime, in search of proof. not the opposite. big distinction? yes. there are cases where there have been serious allegations of corruption by a member of congress, the william jefferson case is one that comes to mind, where there s investigate tools that are deployed. but, chris, this was a pure act of political retaliation.
case is one that comes to mind, where there s investigate tools that are deployed. but, chris, this was a pure act of political retaliation. it was abuse of power. we talked this week about the president s former lawyer and the extraordinary things the white house counsel said, describing the president s behavior has crazy stuff, only he didn t use the word stuff. this is more of the same and it makes you wonder how much more of this is going to come out, how much more abuse happened by trump and by those who were doing his bidding. and in the department of justice, that is just appalling. and i think there are going to be consequences for barr out of this revelation and there should be. right. but, look, pelosi says she supports chairman schiff. we re going to have him on coming up in the show. but this is bigger than schiff.
Teacher, desiringGod.org
When we consider theologians in the history of the church who have celebrated the doctrine of Godâs exhaustive providence, the names that come immediately to mind are Augustine, Calvin, Edwards, and Owen. For my own part, Iâd like to add perhaps a surprising name to that list: C.S. Lewis. While Lewis is widely recognized for his emphasis on human freedom and the centrality of our choices, he also has a profoundly insightful and biblical view of divine providence.
His final book,
Letters to Malcolm, is chiefly about prayer, but itâs partly about providence. And this is not surprising, because the question âIf there is such a thing as divine providence, why should we pray?â occupied Lewis throughout his life. And in this final book (published after his death), he instructs us in how to think about Godâs providence.
in the lexicon before, this is a device that president obama s atf decided would not be regulated in 2010. and i think that s an important part of this conversation. i also would note for all the people, including hillary clinton jumping to twitter while parents were literally still combing the hospitals if not the rubble for their missing loved ones, that this rush to judgment, these inaccuracies that people are putting forward doesn t help anybody in need. it doesn t help one person in their grief and in their recovery. and i would note that we did a i quick little search in my office. have you people like elizabeth warren, bernie sanders, hillary clinton, they either have tweeted to one times this year about guns. this calendar year they have tweeted about russia dozens of times. they have tweeted about this president imunusua imimnumerous measurable times. the cavalry on the high horses need to act. we need to have thoughtful conversations in this country. steve: the president, you