Podcast: Preparing Our Kids for a Post-Christian World (Rebecca McLaughlin)
Rebecca McLaughlin discusses what it looks like for parents to prepare their teens for a life in a post-Christian world, reflectong on kids' propensity to ask hard questions and why that's a good thing,
2 Dangers In Doing the Lord’s Work
Doing the Lord’s work in our own way is betrayal. It is a stab in the Lord’s back.
A Word to Those Who Are Lonely This Christmas
Paul David Tripp
Human beings weren't created to be lonely. We were created for intimate relationship with God and intimate relationships with one another.
An Open Letter to Those Caring for a Loved One with Dementia
John Dunlop, MD
Taking responsibility for the care of a person suffering from any stage of dementia can be one of the greatest challenges of life. But there are not only challenges. There are also opportunities.
Learning Money Management from Jesus
Jerram Barrs
We need to teach much more clearly and with far greater boldness the biblical message that we will have to give an account to God, and that the choices we make today have eternal consequences.
What Your To-Do List Can’t Accomplish
Gloria Furman
When your eyes are fixed on the horizon of eternity, it affects your vision for motherhood.
Does God Care about Gender Identity?
Samuel D. Ferguson
In this video, Samuel D. Ferguson carefully walks through the core beliefs of the transgender movement, comparing them with fundamental truths expressed in Scripture.
Is Any Love Greater Than a Mother's Love?
Not even the love of a mother for her children can compare to the love of God.
A Call for Theological Humility
Gavin Ortlund
There are plenty of issues over which Christians will be tempted to divide. We must even be willing to make sacrificial adjustments for the sake of our unity with others in the body of Christ.
Podcast: Practicing Hospitality in a Pandemic (Rosaria Butterfield)
What does it look like to embrace the call on all Christians in a time where we're limited in unprecedented ways?
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.
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.
Podcast: The False Messages Facing Women Today (Lydia Brownback)
What messages are Christian women hearing and imbibing from culture, and what does the Bible have to say?
How to Worship in a Way That Speaks to Unbelievers
Bob Kauflin
Though we don't want to cater only to the unbelievers in our congregations, we need to be aware of certain things we can do to help them encounter Jesus in a way they can understand.
A Single Word to Sum Up Christmas
Paul David Tripp
God’s response to our rebellion was to give us himself. He is the great redeeming, transforming gift. He is the rescue.
The Irreplaceable Value of Prayer in Your Spiritual Formation
Matthew C. Bingham
If Christians confess that God is personal, both capable and desirous of real relationship with his creatures, then to talk to him should be as natural as it is necessary.
Observing Advent Aright
Jonathan Gibson
The place of Advent in our calendar as being the four-week period before Christmas day on December 25 certainly lends itself to that understanding. However, while this is true, it is only half the truth.
Podcast: A Trauma Surgeon’s Guide to Modern Medicine and the End of Life (Kathryn Butler, MD)
Kathryn Butler, MD shares from her experiences working as a trauma surgeon in an ICU and offers biblical wisdom for walking alongside loved ones at the end of life.
Why Do We Need to Keep Praying “Forgive Us Our Debts”?
Kevin DeYoung
If you want to be happy in the church (or simply not give up on the church), you need to learn forgiveness. You need to grant it, and you need to receive it.
Memorizing Scripture Can Be the Most Important Discipline in Your Christian Walk
Andrew M. Davis
Scripture memorization keeps me close to Christ. As I go over the words of Scripture, I find my heart drawn into active fellowship with Christ.
A Biblical Theology of Cities
Nancy Guthrie
God is transforming the city into a place that he intends to live in forever with his people
The Fruit of the First Sin Was Shame
Mark Talbot
We feel shame when some fault, imperfection, or vulnerability of ours conflicts with what we think we should be. Finding this shameful, we attempt to hide.
The (Anti-Christian) Moral Absolutes of Our Culture
Kevin DeYoung
We live in a time of high moral obligation. The question is who gets to determine what those obligations are?
3 Steps to Take If You’ve Been Waiting on God
Mark Vroegop
If you are walking through a season that is leading you to feel frustrated, anxious, or impatient, here are some steps that can help.
The Power of Double Listening
Tim Chester
Double listening . . . is the faculty of listening to two voices at the same time, the voice of God through Scripture and the voices of men and women around us.
Can We Have Jesus without the Church?
Brett McCracken
Being in fellowship with a church is integral to participating as a part of the body of Christ.
Learning from the Life and Death of Stephen
Nancy Guthrie
This is the way all of us want to live and die. We want to live full of faith and the Holy Spirit.
Help! My Faith Is Being Opposed in the Classrom
Gene C. Fant Jr.
Conflict can be an opportunity to be salt and light, particularly in academic settings.
His Ways Are Not Our Ways
Dane Ortlund
Jesus isn’t like you. Even the most intense of human love is but the faintest echo of heaven’s cascading abundance.
Advice for a New Christian Reading the Psalms
Dane Ortlund
We want to read the Scripture, inhale it, and then exhale it out to God in whatever way makes sense for our own life.