Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile
Matthew J Tuininga

@mjtuininga

Teach history and ethics at Calvin Seminary. Writer, Speaker, Hockey Player, Oilers Fan.

ID: 383321946

linkhttp://matthewtuininga.wordpress.com calendar_today01-10-2011 17:29:55

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464 Followers

76 Following

Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thrilled to announce the release of my new book in January. Order online athttps://global.oup.com/academic/with promotion codeAAFLYG6 to save 30%!

Thrilled to announce the release of my new book in January. Order online athttps://global.oup.com/academic/with promotion codeAAFLYG6 to save 30%!
Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The Wars of the Lord is a grim but gripping chronicle of seventeenth-century New England." --John G. Turner, author of They Knew They Were Pilgrims: Plymouth Colony and the Contest for American Liberty

Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The Wars of the Lord is the best synthesis of colonial-Indian relations in seventeenth-century New England since Alden T. Vaughan's New England Frontier more than half a century ago. - David J. Silverman, author of This Land is Their Land

Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile Photo

John Turner: "The Wars of the Lord is a landmark history of 17th-century New England... If readers need encouragement to plunge into this capacious history, they should know that Tuininga combines sharp analysis with a readable and even entertaining narrative."

Mika Edmondson (@mika_edmondson) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Any theology that accommodates injustice (through denial, minimization, or support) is more secular than sacred. The great mark of this sinful age has always been to ask “am I my brothers keeper?” Christ alone gives us the grace to say with our lives “I am my brothers keeper.”

Christian Library (@rsc_library) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Christian life is rooted in union with Christ. This understanding must serve as a paradigm for Christian ethics. To imitate Christ is the foundation of a biblical understanding of the Christian life. Matthew J Tuininga  goo.gl/ezvnTZ

The Christian life is rooted in union with Christ. This understanding must serve as a paradigm for Christian ethics. To imitate Christ is the foundation of a biblical understanding of the Christian life. <a href="/MJTuininga/">Matthew J Tuininga</a>  goo.gl/ezvnTZ
Matthew J Tuininga (@mjtuininga) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Does Two Kingdoms Theology Make Christians into Republicans or Democrats? You Can’t Have It Both Ways matthewtuininga.wordpress.com/2018/04/04/doe…

Does Two Kingdoms Theology Make Christians into Republicans or Democrats? You Can’t Have It Both Ways matthewtuininga.wordpress.com/2018/04/04/doe…
Jonathan Leeman (@jonathanleeman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If you're driving distance to DC, join @WBLittlejohn, Matthew J Tuininga, Chad van Dixhoorn, Joseph Minich, and I this Saturday for a discussion of church authority, especially if you want to see them wipe the floor with me. davenantinstitute.org/church+authori…

Justin Taylor (@between2worlds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Good reminder from Matthew J Tuininga that when Luther talked about "two kingdoms," he used the terminology in three different ways, and we should clarify which one we're talking about. matthewtuininga.wordpress.com/2012/06/21/jam… [I pulled together the chart based on what Tuininga wrote.]

Good reminder from <a href="/MJTuininga/">Matthew J Tuininga</a> that when Luther talked about "two kingdoms," he used the terminology in three different ways, and we should clarify which one we're talking about. matthewtuininga.wordpress.com/2012/06/21/jam… [I pulled together the chart based on what Tuininga wrote.]