Please click below to view any of the articles in our archive.

Providence consists of divine preservation, concurrence and government.
What are the proofs for preservation, as well as its extent, duration and methods?
Dr. P. S. Ferguson is with the Bible Presbyterian Church in Singapore, and offers some powerful insights into the strength of the Textus Receptus. This is a cross-post from the Puritan Board. Yellow highlights are mine.
God apparently isn't too terribly impressed with the human race, as He likens all of us to grass. So how is grass going to meet this infinity, holy and righteous Judge?

(Video -- 56 mins; plus Study - 3 pgs; Dec 2018)
Though the Chicago Statement on Inerrancy has good content, it still fails at a critical point: verbal plenary preservation. Isolating inerrancy to manuscripts no longer in our possessions leaves a gaping hole in the defense. A brother offers a whimsical illustration of this problem.

Blog - 1 page; 2018
This article provides an overview of the main issues at stake with the Critical Text, which is an new, eclectic Greek text concocted in 1861 by Westscott and Hort, and now serves as the underlying Greek text for nearly all newer translations of the Bible. Pointers to resources by devoted laymen and scholars alike, in both easy, semi-technical, and in-depth format.

(Article with links to books and videos - updated 2023)
The latest hot-selling Bible is the ESV. Before you burn your hard-earned cash, you might want to see what the next-generation RSV actually does to God's Word. You'll be shocked. You may even get kicked out of your church if you even question why 15% of the Received Greek New Testament is missing from this utterly corrupt translation. At best we can only say it contains the word of God.

(Study - 7 pages; 2017)
There are three key lenses through which any Bible translator must work: selecting the underlying Hebrew and Greek text, selecting a translation approach, and identifying the key purpose for the translation. This study covers: What the Bible Says About Itself; What Reformed Confessions Say About The Bible; Reliability of the Texts; Types of Attacks; How We Got Our Bible; What We Have Today; and Main Issues You Should Focus On.

(Study - 11 pages; 2022 update)
We just read what the publisher page says, and figure out who wrote the Bible ... right? Hardly! Some 40 different authors over a period of about 1,600 years contributed to this divine piece of work. How do we know this? What does the Bible say about itself?

(Video - 66 mins; plus Study - 3 pages; 2017)