Sunday, October 19, 2025

One Way Protestants Can Further Their Cause

When you can cite an extrabiblical pre-Reformation source or a source from the Reformation era or later in a given context, make more of an effort to cite the pre-Reformation source. If a church father or a modern theologian could be quoted on a topic, for example, quote the church father. That helps address various problems with ignorance of church history among Protestants, neglect of pre-Reformation sources, mischaracterizations of the historical credibility of Protestantism, etc. I'm not saying you should always cite the pre-Reformation source. That would be simplistic. But it can and should be done more often than it is.

6 comments:

  1. Hi Jason,

    I just want to say that I appreciate you and thank God for the work you continue to do here. I continue to benefit from your posts.

    Thanks.

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  2. I also appreciate your blog. There aren't enough people blogging anymore. They've all gone the way of podcast and YouTube channels. I much prefer written blogs. Keep it up!

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  3. I also appreciate your blog and always find myself coming back here. I especially like it when you write in response to current RC apologists—even if it’s just to link back to earlier articles that address the issue. Praying for you.

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