What Tepper gives to his interlocutors is his attention. And it turns out that can be very helpful. (Fiction)
What Tepper gives to his interlocutors is his attention. And it turns out that can be very helpful. (Fiction)
Come along with me, and let's discover 100 excellent reads from the 21st century.
Our role isn’t to “force worship” upon our people, but to prompt them out of the sheep pen and into a space where the kingdom of God does its transformative work.
For so many Churches of Christ, the process of implementing gender inclusion is a brutal one.
Whether you show up for Summit or not (although I hope you do!), please remember that you and your church are not alone.
Anxious leaderships do allow cranky souls to disturb the peace for those in ministry; too often those leaders are themselves the agitators.
In the New Testament—and still today—the Spirit prompts a worldwide and cross-cultural vision of the kingdom of God.
I am thankful we have forthright, get-to-the-point early Christian leaders like James to remind us of the key to it all.
We will mess up, make mistakes, and mis-handle situations. We will sin and fall short. But we will love, no matter what.
How ought people of faith to think about these matters? Do we have an obligation to enter into political space at all?
Here are a few things I’ve learned while driving for Lyft, as God showed up in my backseat.
The historical answer to our question is simple and tragic. We segregate because of the sin of racism.
I fear that we’ve buried our noses so deep in our texts, that we have forgotten that we have a mission in the world.
Is the presence of Christ set as the destination of our spiritual GPS? Or are we stuck on the side of the road, settling for peanuts, having forgotten where we are going?
The gospel is an emotional story that requires emotional intelligence to discern and follow.
When this bone quits doing its part, the whole body goes down (or spins in circles). When affliction hits it, head and hands react.
Unless we reconsider our traditional handling of the biblical texts on elders, we may stall these selection processes before they even begin.
This is the story of how God worked to help Destiny find her destiny as a disciple.
Ministry leaders in all types of Christian communities are deep in conversation about bringing the generations back together.
Could it be that from this point on, the Christian church should be about movement and the spreading of this tent to the ends of the earth?