10 Things You Should Know about Physician-Assisted Suicide
John Dunlop, MD
Throughout a believer’s life, there may be a continuous struggle to submit to God’s control. But when my earthly life comes to an end I want to be fully surrendered to God and be able to rest in Jesus.
You Are Set Free from Self-Improvement
Lydia Brownback
Many of us believe that Christian discipleship is synonymous with self-improvement. But true Christian discipleship is a call to die, not to improve.
How to Adapt Our Children’s Ministries to Reach Every Kind of Learner
Sandra Peoples
How do we meet the needs of the diverse group of learners we have? How do we know what they can learn, what challenges they face, and what our expectations should be?
3 Threats to Deep Relationships
Drew Hunter
What makes deep relationships so uncommon and challenging today?
Stay on Mission—Even in the Later Years
Susan Hunt
One joy of aging is a stillness of soul that helps us see the small moments as sacred moments when we can reflect God’s glory to someone else.
Podcast: A Christian Perspective on Depression (Kathryn Butler, MD)
Kathryn Butler shares encouraging insights that offer hope for those who struggle with depression and help for those seeking to care for someone who does.
No More Passive Fathering
Fathers are called upon to choose not only between our children and our work, but between our convenience and the inconvenience of keeping a promise.
Podcast: Family Discipleship 101 (Adam Griffin)
What is family discipleship, and how can parents start discipling their kids?
God’s Word Is Necessary
Kevin DeYoung
The doctrine of the necessity of Scripture reminds us of our predicament: the One we need to know most cannot be discovered on our own, and this same ineffable One has made himself known through his word.
Nehemiah's Deeper Concern for Building Up God's People
Wallace P. Benn
The work of God gets done when there is a good heart for God and his work. It starts in a heart with a deep concern for the glory of God and the health of his church.
The Biblical Case for Observing the Sabbath Today
Guy Prentiss Waters
We were made to work, but we were made for more than work. We were made for worship—fellowship in communion with the living God.
Should Our Sexual Desires Determine Who We Really Are?
Carl R. Trueman
Sigmund Freud argued that who we are at the most fundamental level is our sexual desires. And, of course, once you start arguing that, then two things happen.
How to Avoid a Wasted Life
John Piper
The wasted life is the life without a passion for the supremacy of God in all things for the joy of all peoples.
Where Do Christians Get the Doctrine of Total Depravity?
Jonathan Gibson
Doctrines arise out of holding together a whole number of biblical texts and then synthesizing internally related doctrines as they’ve been understood through church history.
Why Higher Education Needs to Know Its History
David S. Dockery
The richness of the Christian tradition can provide guidance for the complex challenges facing Christian higher education at this time.
End-of-Life Comfort Measures: A Realistic Assessment
Kathryn Butler
In the right circumstances, modern critical care saves lives. Yet medical technology harbors a dark side.
Introducing the ‘ESV Exhaustive Concordance’
Introducing a new tool to help with in-depth word study.
Dear Pastor, Slowing Down Might Just Save Your Ministry
Coleman M. Ford,
Shawn J. Wilhite
In the past five years alone, how many reading this have questioned your calling, lost ministry friends and co-laborers, or have grown generally weary?
Why Believing That God Is Sovereign Makes All the Difference
Erik Raymond
God's sovereignty applies to our everyday lives because it assures us that he working in every circumstance.
We Should Expect Frustration When Reading the Bible
Jen Wilkin
If we give in to impatience with the learning process, we tend to react in one of two ways.
My Breakthrough in Scripture Memory
David Mathis
Maybe the breakthrough could come with some simple change in perspective. What if Scripture memory really was about today?
How to Move Doctrine from Head to Heart
Joel R. Beeke
If you preach to the heart, you enter into the experience of the people of God as they encounter doctrine in their own lives.
What Does the Aaronic Blessing Ultimately Promise Us?
Michael J. Glodo
The highest happiness of every believer is to see the face of God unmediated, not just having to look with the eyes of faith but actually one day seeing with our eyes.
5 Marks of Contentment
Erik Raymond
With our course marked out for learning contentment, let’s think about how we might evaluate where we are in our own personal progress.
Our Christian Terminology Is Built on the Old Testament
Greg Lanier
When it comes to the nuts and bolts of the gospel, the NT often adopts essential concepts/words from the OT, particularly the Greek version.
Share the Good News of Easter
This spring, Crossway is eager to partner with churches, ministries, and individual Christians to help God’s people share the good news of Easter with their communities.
Why Contentment Stems from a Thankful Heart
Francis A. Schaeffer
If the contentment goes and the giving of thanks goes, we are not loving God as we should, and proper desire has become coveting against God.
What Does Depression Mean for My Faith?
Kathryn Butler
Kathryn Butler speaks to some of the misconceptions about clinical depression, which can be especially challenging for those of us who are followers of Christ.
How to Maintain Everyday Faithfulness in Festive Times
Glenna Marshall
God has equipped us to follow Christ faithfully no matter what season of life we’re living.
Why You Don’t Need to Be a Super Saint to Be a Spiritual Mother
Susan Hunt
Spiritual mothering may involve mentoring and coaching, but it is broader.