Aaron Day
@aaronvday
Christian / Bible and Theology teacher @fcaclassical / Interested in an ordinary life / Fueled by breakfast and second breakfast
I don’t know if our group qualifies as “mature” or “scholarly,” mainly because I’m there. But weekly service review, service planning, and sermon text study at WRBC is the most edifying part of my week after the Lord’s Day.
Don't? More seriously, imagine if, instead of using AI to help write their sermons, pastors were to make a practice of gathering some mature and scholarly members of their congregations every week to discuss the passage they were going to preach upon that Sunday.
I still don’t understand how this technology actually worked
Yup, this was a thing.
“Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” II Timothy 2:15
I’m looking forward to this one. I’m already convictionally and vocationally in the world of classical, Christian ed. But I read whatever @T_A_Gatewood tells me to.

Does anyone here notice that younger writers functionally abhor capitalization? Is it rooted in influencer culture? Despising authority? What is it?!
New article up on aaronvday.wordpress.com it’s a part of a series on reading and how it is we may know the world and words in a better way. This week, Anselm is our guide!
Announcment number 1 for the week: I re-vamped my website as a space to house most of my written work as well as videos and podcast appearances. There’s also a new essay up! Check it out and let me know what you think! aaronvday.wordpress.com
Two things coming this week that I’m excited to share: 1) An overdue revamp (coming Tuesday) 2) A brand new venture (coming Friday) Been working to share these as we seek to live in the spirit of Lewis’s “Learning in Wartime” #TheologyMatters #ClassicalEducation #FaithAndCulture
Love acts itself by contemplation. It is in the nature of it to be meditating and contemplating on the excellencies of God in Christ; yea, this is the life of it, and where this is not, there is no love.
***GIVEAWAY RAFFLE*** Prize: The Greek New Testament Produced at Tyndale House, Cambridge, Guided Annotating Edition (CROSSWAY) HARDCOVER. 5 WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN AT RANDOM Rules: - Follow @crossway and @JCRyle AND retweet this post. ALSO, tag a friend in the…
The original double use of language in music I can find that links Johnny Cash to hip-hop, “It costs a dime, just to nickel a shoe that does a million dollars worth of good for you.” Thoughts?
The sudden whirlwind of confusion among Democrats and their media protectors is a judgment from God. Put the right to kill unborn babies and mutilate children at the center of your political agenda, and "the Lord will strike you with insanity, blindness, and with confusion of…
Growing in my appreciation for Reformed Baptist associations that require full subscription to the 2LCF.
Christological heresy is bad, actually.
As a Protestant who believes that Scripture alone is our ultimate and final authority, I think even the statements of ecumenical councils have to be brought before Scripture, and I see nothing in Scripture that warrants saying that Christ has two wills. buff.ly/3yXJY3R
Upon a deeper reading of the literature surrounding Nicaea, "one baptism for the forgiveness of sins" could be (& has been) affirmed by Baptists according to the authorial intent of the phrase. The assumption that Baptists have had to revise this statement is woefully dubious.
Before you sin, Satan tells you repentance is easy. After you sin, Satan tells you repentance is impossible.
If this catches on, I need restitution for the amount of times I've typed Cambridge, Grand Rapids, Nashville, New Haven, New York, Oxford, and Wheaton in my lifetime.
As a Protestant who believes that Scripture alone is our ultimate and final authority, I think even the statements of ecumenical councils have to be brought before Scripture, and I see nothing in Scripture that warrants saying that Christ has two wills. buff.ly/3yXJY3R