Not Very Flattering
Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but when evangelicals imitate some popular movements, the results are often not very flattering.
Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but when evangelicals imitate some popular movements, the results are often not very flattering.
There’s a big generational divide regarding the war in Ukraine. It might be bridged if Americans young and old became better readers.
Could there be more to Jesus’ offer of “living water” than we recognize?
Do we imagine Jesus as the Bridegroom proposing marriage to the Samaritan woman at the well? Augustine did.
Jane Studdock’s story suggests what many of us might repent of.
Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address is considered one of the greatest messages ever, largely because it had a central governing metaphor, a main image. Do you know what it is?
Lent is a season for penitence and preparation. But if we miss the main point of the cross, we’re left asking, Repent of what? Prepare for what?
Christians don’t have to be foreign policy experts, but they should at least understand what gave rise to the war in Ukraine.
Jesus said we cannot—can not—be his disciples unless we give up all our possessions. Why then does it seem so few Christians take this seriously?
I appreciate folks who can evolve in their thinking. So I find it fascinating that many who are evolving are recommending the same way forward.