Nicholas Batzig
Rev. Nicholas T. Batzig is the organizing pastor of New Covenant Presbyterian Church in Richmond Hill, Ga. Nick grew up on St. Simons Island, Ga. In 2001 he moved to Greenville, SC where he met his wife Anna, and attended Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary.
Articles for Pastors
20 Scriptural Benedictions You Can Use to Bless Your Church
Benedictions are divine blessings from Scripture pronounced by the minister in order to equip God’s people as He sends them out into the world to live for Christ.
Pastors
Praying in Jesus’ Name
It is altogether possible for believers to close their prayer with the words "in Jesus' name" or “in Christ’s name” or “for Christ’s sake” as a sort of mindless mantra.
Pastors
Beware the Backward Drift
In John Bunyan’s classic, "The Pilgrim's Progress," there is a sobering picture of the experience of apostasy in the lives of those who once professed faith in Christ but who ultimately abandoned that profession.
Pastors
As Little Truth as Possible?
There is no virtue in being ignorant of the truth of Scripture. In fact, knowledge of God's revelation in the Bible is never frowned upon in Scripture.
Articles for Worship & Creative
Do You Know the Regulative Principle of Worship?
individuals who are serious about the regulative principle of worship put everything into the categories of "good vs. bad" instead of into what we may consider to be "good, better, and best" practices.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
Cultivating Divine Blessing Through Prayer
How then can we cultivate a means of grace toward divine blessing for the benefit of the church in our day and the advancement of the kingdom of God among His people?
Pastors
Differing Spiritual Temperaments
One of the things that I have been struck with is the way in which Jesus interacts with various disciples having differing spiritual temperaments.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
The Path to True Greatness
Jesus teaches the disciples that there is a path to true greatness. It is a path of self-denial and suffering. Alexander again notes, "glory and suffering and inextricably linked together in the purposes of God."
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