What are emerging adults like, and what are their biggest concerns, questions, and the issues they care about most?
What are emerging adults like, and what are their biggest concerns, questions, and the issues they care about most?
What I admire about these books is the pared-down simplicity and straightforward language of the storytelling. (Fiction)
I’ve been working on an elder selection process at our church, and I’m struck by a startling truth: appointing elders is just like setting up a fish tank.
Fear is not the most reliable of counselors. Yet in the face of darkness we all have to come to the terrible truth that monsters are real.
We greatly overestimate our knowledge and we have far more confidence in ourselves than our abilities actually merit. (Nonfiction)
True growth comes not from questions of defense, but questions about how to reach a dark world with the light of Jesus.
We must understand that happiness is something we experience as we choose to pursue holiness.
Last Days has the form of a detective story, but really it’s a horror story. And a religious horror story at that. (Fiction)
From my experience, resistance to gender inclusion was far more about fear, conflict, and change than anything else.
The title essay is about, well, eating lobster and the practice of boiling them alive. Wherever you come out on the practice, the essay is thought-provoking. (Nonfiction)
There is no doubt in my mind that everything done that day was a reflection of God pushing us out of fear and into productivity and resilience.
To operate under the assumption that we all encounter injustice in the same way diminishes the strength that comes when we purposefully stand up for each other.
Our intrepid narrator is Emmett, and there is nothing special about him at all. What makes Emmett such wonderful company is that he is delighted with the world. (Fiction)
I suspect that Donald Trump has figured out that as a leader, whether he is nice or crude, he will be criticized.
We do not see individualized, compartmentalized faith modeled in the New Testament.
For those of us in ministry this book is a constant challenge to seek the image and likeness of God in those places and people where it may not be so evident on the surface. (Nonfiction)
These reasons for growth transcend simply being at the right place at the right time.
To be a good minister—a good shepherd faithfully following the Good Shepherd—sometimes you have to order the “death” of something you love.
This book is actually about many things and it is a good old-fashioned plot-driven, character-rich novel. (Fiction)