Smaller churches carry great strengths that can support flourishing spiritual communities.
Smaller churches carry great strengths that can support flourishing spiritual communities.
My engagement with my work led to more questions, which brought me back to more reflection. The ever-pressing question was, “Where is God in work?”
Now that this is a more intuitive process for me, I share these three practical guidelines for preaching a funeral.
There may be no better text for preaching in divisive cultural moments than the book of Ephesians. Here, the church sees a picture of all-encompassing unity.
Don’t just read this book because you think you should like Shakespeare. Read it because we need it right now. Really. (Nonfiction)
We live in an age of distrust, which has profound implications for the church as an institution, for us as people, and for leadership.
Factions from both sides of the aisle find reasons to believe their opponent is the devil’s minion or the devil incarnate.
All of the stories are slightly weird, and all of them will make you shift uncomfortably in your chair and probably look a little differently at the people all around you. (Fiction)
We must take a fresh look at our priorities, and the spiritual discipline of detachment is invaluable in this process.
What contributes to the growing divide between older and younger generations' views of the church?
Have your neighbors, coworkers, or classmates over for a meal. Just pick a family out of your world and host them in your home.
Anyone who knows the story of Northern Ireland already knows a great deal of what is going to happen, yet it reads like a well plotted murder mystery or historical fiction. (Nonfiction)
You know who coined the term cyberspace? It was not a physicist, but a novelist. (Fiction)
Every decision we make, from the food we eat to how we structure our time, provides an opportunity to show a watching world who God is.
In a world where traditional Christian cosmology is often depicted as a form of silly superstition, it seems as if other theories sometimes get a free pass. (Nonfiction)
If our urgency is misplaced, we will create unnecessary tension that ultimately pulls us – and possibly others – away from the will of God.
One of the main things that McEwan wishes to explore is what happens if we create robots that have a higher sense of morality than we have. (Fiction)
We witness a demonstration of love that speaks to the humility and self-sacrificing nature of who Jesus is at his very core .