Papers
All of the material on this page and all sub-sections, are Copyrighted (© Douglas M. Beaumont).
Copying someone’s personal work without their consent is considered intellectual theft by the laws of the land – even for Christians! (Thus, taking legal action against such persons would not violate either 1 Cor. 6:1-8 or Mt. 18:15-17.) No material from these articles may be published, reprinted, blogged, or edited, whether for profit or non-profit, without my written consent (mail specific requests along with a self-addressed and stamped envelope to: Douglas M. Beaumont PO Box 953 Waxhaw NC 28173).
Proper citation must be used in any time this work is quoted, referenced, or otherwise used.
This does not preclude anyone from quoting from this material, so long as it falls under the “fair use” rules of copyright law (see www.copyright.gov – Section 107). Note: this does not allow the creation of a derivative work simply because it is cited – that is illegal. The proper citation format is:
Beaumont, Douglas M. “Article Title.” Charlotte, NC: Year. URL (access date).
Note that the article title should come from the in-document title, not the link’s title. For example, the link “Hermeneutics of Eschatology” should be cited as:
Beaumont, Douglas M. “The Hermeneutics of Eschatology: Preterism and Dispensationalism Compared.” Charlotte, NC: 2009. http://souldevice.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/hermeneutics-of-eschatology.pdf (accessed June 21, 2010).
- Answering Arguments for Euthanasia
- Body, Parts, and Passions: Impassibility and Its Implications for Corporeality
- Christ as “The True”
- The Dodecahedron of Opposition
- Good Works and the Virtuous Life
- Hermeneutics of Eschatology
- Identifying the Vine and Branches
- Jehovah’s Witnesses and the New World Translation | (Espanol)
- The Law and the Gospel
- The Lordship Salvation / Free Grace Debate
- Norman Geisler on Divine Sovereignty, Freedom, and Evil
- The Existence of Chuck Norris
- The Relation of Scripture to Church Tradition
- Thomas Flint on Divine Sovereignty, Freedom, and Evil
- A Traditional Response to The Synoptic Problem
- Zeno’s Paradoxes

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