Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile
Jeremiah Knight

@iamrjknight

Apologist and Bible Teacher | Founder of, "The Reformation Resurgence" | Serving the Lord from India 🇮🇳 | Soli Deo Gloria.

ID: 102250403

linkhttp://www.facebook.com/ACallToReform calendar_today06-01-2010 02:55:23

9,9K Tweet

438 Followers

173 Following

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Good question — but it’s built on a misunderstanding of biblical theology. Scripture never sanitizes the lives of God’s people. It tells the truth — even the ugly parts. David, a man after God’s own heart, committed adultery and murder (2 Samuel 11). Did that mean he was never

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Oh no… not the “Marcion card.” 😱 That’s cute.😂 You do realize Marcion was a heretic, right? Mid-2nd century. Rejected the Old Testament. But thanks for bringing up a guy the early church universally condemned — you just proved my point: there was already a known body of

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Q: Do signs and wonders validate a true move of God? A: Not always. Scripture teaches that Satan performs false signs to deceive (2 Thess. 2:9–10), and God sends strong delusion on those who reject the truth (2 Thess. 2:11–12). Miracles without sound doctrine are not

Q: Do signs and wonders validate a true move of God?

A: Not always. Scripture teaches that Satan performs false signs to deceive (2 Thess. 2:9–10), and God sends strong delusion on those who reject the truth (2 Thess. 2:11–12). Miracles without sound doctrine are not
Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You’ve raised a lot of points, so let’s walk through them carefully and biblically. 1. “Who says miracles aren’t foundational?” — Scripture does. Miracles in the New Testament were signs to confirm the message as it was being revealed. They were never the foundation of the

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This passage is one of the most sobering in the New Testament, and it’s often misunderstood. But when read in context and in light of the rest of Scripture, it becomes clear: it’s not teaching that true believers can lose their salvation. Hebrews 6:4–6 is part of a larger

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

God’s Sovereignty and Man’s Responsibility — perfectly (and accidentally) summarized in this sign board: “Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes the reason is you’re stupid and make bad decisions.” ✔️ Yes, God is sovereign over all things (Proverbs 16:9) ✔️ Yes, man is

God’s Sovereignty and Man’s Responsibility — perfectly (and accidentally) summarized in this sign board:

“Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes the reason is you’re stupid and make bad decisions.”

✔️ Yes, God is sovereign over all things (Proverbs 16:9)
✔️ Yes, man is
Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Charles, I appreciate the respectful tone and how seriously you’re taking this. But the issue isn’t whether the Catechism sounds biblical. The issue is whether what it teaches lines up with what the Bible actually says — especially in Hebrews. You’re right — CCC 1367 says the

Jeremiah Knight (@iamrjknight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Q: What’s the proof that Christ's work is truly finished? A: Three words from the Cross: It is finished. Three words from the Throne: He sat down. No priest in the Old Testament ever sat—because their work was never done. But Christ made one sacrifice for sins, once for all…

Q: What’s the proof that Christ's work is truly finished?

A: Three words from the Cross: It is finished.
Three words from the Throne: He sat down.
No priest in the Old Testament ever sat—because their work was never done. But Christ made one sacrifice for sins, once for all…