I’ve Heard It Said That the Bible Is God’s Love Letter to Us
Jen Wilkin
“The Bible is God’s love letter to us.” I can see where that’s coming from. It’s not a hundred percent wrong. It’s just that it’s probably not a big enough statement about what the Bible is.
Faith Is Impossible
Paul David Tripp
Faith is much more than a one-time decision; it is a lifestyle lived with the presence, promises, and call of God always in view.
“Mommy, Do You Like Being a Mom?”
Katie Faris
Even if and when we talk about some of the harder parts of parenting, we want to do so in a way that affirms our love for our children and how much we value them.
Love the Neighbors Living in Your Own Home
Courtney Reissig
Our neighbors are the people who are in closest proximity to us. They're not always in the house next to us or the homeless shelter across town. Often, they're sleeping in the next room over.
Justification Is Forensic (Not Transformative)
Thomas R. Schreiner
Certainly Paul teaches that Christians are transformed by God’s grace. But we must not make the mistake of reading Paul’s theology as a whole into every word he uses.
The Gospel in Lamentations
Graeme Goldsworthy
Out of the smoking ruins came cries of lamentation and confession, and the daring hope of restoration.
Christian Economics 101
Greg Forster
With a Christian perspective, we can see the economy as a social web that God has created for people to serve each other with their work.
Why Moralistic Therapeutic Deism Is a Dead End
Jen Oshman
It's very easy to shelve God and decide we don't really need him, that we just need to believe in ourselves and to invent who we are and what we want to do.
The Gospel in Amos
David R. Helm
In four ways, the Old Testament book of Amos is essential for a robust understanding of the gospel.
5 Questions Every Church Must Answer Before It Can Send Out Pastors and Missionaries
Aaron Menikoff,
Harshit Singh
Your church will be ready to send out pastors and missionaries only when it can answer each of the following five questions with a loud and hearty, “Yes, and amen!”
Jesus’s Radical Call to Discipleship in Mark
Peter Orr
Mark 8:34 recounts Jesus’s most pointed teaching on the nature of discipleship. This instruction applies to all (i.e., not simply the twelve) who want to follow him.
God’s People Are a Forgetful People
Jonathan Gibson
We human beings are forgetful by nature. I do not mean in a finite sense but in a fallen sense. We forget because we choose to forget.
Why the Church Needs Teens and Teens Need the Church
Jaquelle Ferris
Because they are a part of the body of Christ, teens should be included in the active community of the church.
Bible Study Resources for Women
One of the most important things you can schedule is consistent time in the Bible. How will you prioritize God's Word this fall?
If the Good News Is So Good, Why Aren’t People Flocking to It?
Daniel Hames,
Michael Reeves
Perhaps the most perplexing response we encounter in evangelism is not so much anger but apathy. This reaction may frustrate the evangelist, but it should provoke our compassion.
Why It’s OK that God Loves Himself Most
Jonathan Leeman
Where God’s love is fundamentally different than a fallen human being’s love is that it is holy. It is utterly set on himself and his own glory.
A Trial Lawyer Answers the Most Searched Questions about the Criminal Justice System
Matthew T. Martens
Matt Martens is a trial lawyer in Washington, DC who has spent most of his career in criminal law. In this video, he offers clear and candid answers to some of the most searched questions about criminal justice.
The Gospel in Nahum
Michael J. Glodo
In a variety of ways, the prophecy of Nahum brings home the gospel and carries along the redemptive story that culminates in Jesus Christ.
The Gospel in Ecclesiastes
Douglas Sean O'Donnell
Throughout Ecclesiastes we are led forward to other answers, other solutions, and other wisdom than the world’s vain promises of satisfaction, happiness, and fulfillment.
How Is Jesus Able to “Sympathize with Our Weaknesses”?
Dane Ortlund
This truth is hard to believe because it is so wonderful: even though Jesus is now in heaven he is just as open and tender in his embrace of sinners and sufferers as when he was on earth.
How True Change Happens
Tim Chester
The glorious good news of Jesus is that you and I can change. Part of the problem is we often try to change in the wrong way.
3 Christmas Gifts for You
John Piper
If Christ came to die so that when you do sin, there is a propitiation, a removal of God’s wrath, then what does this imply for living your life? Three things.
Imagine Reading ‘The Lord of the Rings’ the Way You Read the Bible
Greg Gilbert
Imagine reading The Lord of the Rings out of order. You pick it up, flip over to Rivendell for a moment, then hop over to Mordor before slamming back into the Shire.
Tracing Christianity’s Impact on Slavery through the Centuries
Sharon James
If we live in the West, we often take freedom for granted. But the idea that every human is of equal dignity and should be afforded liberty has not been obvious to most cultures.
Practical Counsel for Those Who Have Experienced Painful Divorce
Wayne Grudem
Christians who have been through divorces also have a wonderful encouragement to realize that Jesus understands our sufferings and is willing to walk beside us in them.
A Devotional on the Most Glorious of Birthdays by Charles Spurgeon
Leland Ryken,
Charles H. Spurgeon
The birth of Christ should be the subject of supreme joy. We have the angelic warrant for rejoicing because Christ is born.
The Gospel in Jonah
Colin Smith
Once we begin to pull back the layers of the story, we discover that it is not really about what Jonah is doing for God, but what God is doing for Jonah.
What the Early Church Can Teach Us about Living in This Strange New World
Carl R. Trueman
Traditional Christians are typically those who take history seriously. If only we might be able to return to ancient worlds, we tell ourselves, all might be well.