What do you do when life hits you with grief and pain that is so overwhelming that there are no words for it? If you are a writer with Sonali Deraniyagala’s skill, you write the unspeakable. (Nonfiction)
What do you do when life hits you with grief and pain that is so overwhelming that there are no words for it? If you are a writer with Sonali Deraniyagala’s skill, you write the unspeakable. (Nonfiction)
In far too many places, the structure of leadership—the way in which decisions and deliberations are handled—creates obstacles for the congregation’s mission.
Why should a preacher read Kundera? There’s no one else who faces more squarely the conundrum of living in a post-Nietzsche world. (Fiction)
Jesus’s disciples, when faced with the imminent possibility of death, ask the question of the ages when they ask, “Do you not care that we are perishing?”
Patience keeps us fixated on our hope and shields us from acting out of our restlessness as we wait for the coming of the Lord.
Let’s begin this review with a little quiz. I will give you the title of the book, and you try to guess what the book is about. Ready? (Nonfiction)
As the year comes to a close, there is one practice that should be built into our schedules: reflection.
Beauty might be in the eye of the beholder, but that eye seems inconsistent in its demands for meeting expectations of beauty.
It has much to say about the ongoing conflict of the secular world with the world of religious conviction. And it certainly might cause you to rethink how you have viewed that conflict and what its future might be. (Fiction)
Jesus reveals that true leadership is about taking responsibility for others, not amassing authority for ourselves. As the church, what image of kingship do we promote?
My recent surgery made me think about melanoma and sin, about radical physical and spiritual surgery, and about recovery.
If you ever wonder whether one can change the facts in order to more clearly present the truth, do I have a book for you! (Nonfiction)
Knowledge provides opportunity to choose areas in which we desire greater health, where growth is possible and ministries can become more robust.
The basic idea of the novel is simple and straightforward. Jesus has come back to modern America as the Hispanic street preacher, Jay. (Fiction)
Authority was a pervasive concern as I talked with those who were upset about gender inclusion. “The man has to be the leader,” I kept hearing.
Weiner begins the book as an agnostic with a Jewish background. A health scare sets him on a journey to answer a question from a nurse: “Have you found God yet?” (Nonfiction)
While many of us in the U.S. celebrate Thanksgiving this week with loved ones and abundant food, may we also pause to express thanks for the bounty.
One of the most underrated skills of truly great preaching is attentiveness. (Fiction)
Each church might be able to share some of the natural and even unlikely places where ties are created, but here are some that I have seen strengthen a church.
When the Son of Man comes, will he find the kind of faith that nags at an unjust system even when it feels like the cards are stacked against what is right?