We’re in over our heads; light spreads at too slow a pace for one step, it seems. We’re waiting; are you here?
We’re in over our heads; light spreads at too slow a pace for one step, it seems. We’re waiting; are you here?
What would you be willing to lay aside for the good of someone else? Would you be willing to give up your seat? Your lunch? Your comfort? Your time? Your money?
It is a brilliantly conceived and executed novel that turns the camera lens and compels us to see events from a different angle. (Fiction)
The world often makes us feel hopeless. But God gives us a different message in the midst of despair: hope.
How exactly do you equip someone? A good place to start is to study how Jesus equipped his followers.
Fine art is an imposing climb when you’re just getting started. So let me suggest four books that might get you started. (Nonfiction)
Is there something we are not experiencing now (online)? If so, what is “it”? Given that “it” comes with potential costs, how do we decide if and when “it” is worth it?
As if things couldn’t get any weirder, it seems that coronavirus is proving to be quite the surprise on-ramp for gender inclusion.
As you are forming your own response to the situation we find ourselves in, there is no other book that presents the challenge in a more formidable way. (Fiction)
I believe that this moment is inviting us to lament. Why? Because God is present in our reality and invites us to be present.
We believe that God is faithful, that hope is our lifeblood, and that the future is bound up not in our past but in God’s work of transformation.
It has been 40 days today. There’s certainly biblical significance to the span of 40 days. It seems to be a significant time marker for earth dwellers.
The most pressing question for me is, how are we supposed to navigate the challenge of pastoral care?
Ministers should read this book simply because it’s a great novel, but it also offers training in the excavation of the soul. (Fiction)
I want the people whom I come in contact with to leave our time together, whether brief or extended, and think, “That was the best part of my day.”
The book is trying to answer a very basic question: in any particular moment, why do human beings behave badly or with deep goodness? (Nonfiction)
What is church supposed to look like when the primary expressions of congregational life and ministry and mission are no longer available to us?
Like my brothers in the prison, suddenly we are all hoping that death won’t have the last word.
When the sting of death and pandemic turns into a dull denial and numb reality, where do we find hope?
If Holy Thursday teaches us anything, it’s that Jesus is in the business of putting souls back together that have been torn apart by grief and fear.