The Importance of Worldview Development in Education
At the presuppositional level, Christian education is not 75 or 90 percent different from non-Christian education, it is totally and radically different.
At the presuppositional level, Christian education is not 75 or 90 percent different from non-Christian education, it is totally and radically different.
In this study of the Book of Ecclesiastes, Steven R. Martins deconstructs and exposits the literary “Introduction” of the book, the passage of Ecclesiastes 1:12-18, where the voices of the Qohelet (Compiler) and the young rabbi (teacher) apprentices are introduced.
In this study of the Book of Ecclesiastes, Rev. Steven R. Martins deconstructs and exposits what some call “The Preface” of the book, the passage of Ecclesiastes 1:1-11, which introduces its literary thesis: All of life is “Vanity” (Hevel).
What were the top five moments of apologetic history in the early church according to Wesley Huff of Apologetics Canada? Institute founder Steven R. Martins sits down with Wesley to go over these historical moments and what we can learn for our own apologetic today.
Why Christian education? With secular educational institutions across the country, why do we need to set that aside and not even consider that as an option for the education of our children?
Nearly all Christians know the two recorded events of Jesus feeding the five thousand and walking on water, they’re found in Matthew 14:13-33, but few give attention to the three verses that follow.
On the 1st of March, 2024, Paideia Press published the book Every Christian Is an Evangelist: Biblical Motivations for Sharing the Gospel by Brian G. Najapfour (PhD).
Stephen Hawking believed that the universe could be understood through a single, unifying framework, and that framework, he believed, was the lens of physics.
Sometime in the past month, the Cántaro Institute managed to acquire a protestant literary treasure from a used antiquarian bookstore in Madrid, Spain.
What is it that agitates Nietzsche so deeply? He is a child of his time, and his time was the calm before the storm. He stands, in that calm, as the prophet of the coming century, our century.