Everyone Has a Worldview, and Almost No One Has a Worldview
James Eglinton
J. H. Bavinck makes the paradoxical claim that worldview is both everywhere (“Everyone has a worldview”) and nowhere (“Almost no one has a worldview”). How can both these statements be true?
The Modern Challenge to the Doctrine of Justification
Matthew Barrett
In the 21st Century, though, we not only continue to face that challenge that the Reformers had with the Roman Catholic Church but also a bigger task.
How the Gospel Transforms Our Productivity
Ana Ávila
To be productive is to embrace the reality of what God does in us and to respond in worship through our work and our rest.
How Adoption Mirrors God’s Love for the Fatherless
Amy DiMarcangelo
Throughout history, God has faithfully used Christians to play a pivotal role in orphan care. Until Christ’s return—when he brings full restoration and makes all things new—we’re called to continue this work.
How Rumination Falls Short of Meditation
Carolyn Mahaney,
Nicole Mahaney Whitacre
When we fix our attention on God’s standard we will begin to feel peace and hope.
3 Ways to Prepare for the Battles of Ministry
Paul David Tripp
How do we strategize together as leadership communities for the battle?
You Live in a God-Entranced World
John Piper
The world is not a machine that God made to run on its own. It is a painting, or a sculpture, or a drama.
God Designed You for Peace
Courtney Doctor
What deeper source of peace could we ever find than the holy, infinite, majestic, Creator God looking on us with love and joy?
To Lead Others, Become a Disciple
Mark Dever
A disciple of Jesus follows in Jesus’s steps, doing as Jesus taught and lived. But it means more than that.
Jesus Is Not Ashamed of Those with an Embarrassing Past: The Story of Tamar
Erik Raymond
While we may blush over our sin and our stories and our embarrassing past, we have a Savior who doesn't blush. He actually enters into the mess with us.
Act Like the Human that You Are
C. Everett Koop,
Francis A. Schaeffer
People are special and human life is sacred, whether or not we admit it. Every life is precious and worthwhile in itself—not only to us human beings but also to God.
Social Algorithms Are Today’s “Lady Folly”
Brett McCracken
Algorithms lure us into constant distraction by putting “suggestions” into our minds, waiting to pounce and consume our attention.
Worship Is a Dialogue
Mark Jones
God speaks in light of who he is and what he has done, and we respond back to God.
There’s No Heaven That Envy Can’t Turn into Hell
Gavin Ortlund
Envy is one of those sins that hides and lurks. And so many times we can be experiencing envy that's robbing our joy, and yet we're not even aware that we're struggling with the sin of envy.
Podcast: Is the Age of the Earth a Hill to Die On? (Gavin Ortlund)
Gavin Ortlund discusses the Genesis creation account, what the Bible really teaches on the days of creation, and whether there is room for disagreement on this topic within Christian orthodoxy.
Parents, Disciple Your Teens (While There's Still Time)
Jaquelle Ferris
Teens need discipleship, and parents are some of the best disciplers.
What Parents Can Learn from Children’s Books
J. I. Packer
In many respects, and certainly in spiritual matters, we are all weak and inadequate, and we need to face it.
5 Lessons from One of the Most Famous Christmas Carols of All Time
Greg Forster
How we live in the world should manifest the change the Spirit is working in us, carrying the impact of the joy of God “far as the curse is found.”
3 Tangible Ways to Care for Widows
For the widow, a needed gift, a consumable gift, or a sentimental gift are some of the most significant gifts she can receive that often uniquely minister to her.
Podcast: Is Christianity on the Decline? (Rebecca McLaughlin)
Secular culture often takes issue with various beliefs held by conservative Christians. In this episode, Rebecca McLaughlin responds to two of the most common.
Merciful and Gracious
Dane Ortlund
It takes a lot of sermons and a lot of suffering to believe that God’s deepest heart is “merciful and gracious, slow to anger.”
How to Read (and Not Read) the Bible
Philip Graham Ryken
We have to read the Bible as literature, but we also have to recognize that it is unlike any other book we know.
2 Comforts for Those Discouraged with Prayer
Kevin DeYoung
Many Christians are—or have been—discouraged by their prayer lives. Here are a couple of things to remember about the practice of prayer.
The Mission Field I Never Expected
Rachel Wilson
For those of us who are parents, God wants us to esteem the field he’s given us. It’s not a tiring distraction from the true mission field we should be tilling.
Who Do You Belong To?
Brian S. Rosner
A really intriguing thing, which goes against the notion of expressive individualism, is the fact that we live in shared stories.
Rich in Mercy
Dane Ortlund
If God sent his own Son to walk through the valley of condemnation, rejection, and hell, you can trust him as you walk through your own valleys on your way to heaven.
How We Learn to See the Face of Jesus
Michael J. Glodo
Experiencing the reassuring, transformative, and hope-giving power of God’s gracious gaze in Christ means we must practice seeing Christ’s glory.
Why Am I So Unhappy?
Why are so many people so unhappy in so many different circumstances?
How to Do Family Worship with Young Kids
Donald S. Whitney
Several specific situations commonly prompt questions about the feasibility of family worship.
Taking A Closer Look at Colossians 3:1–4
Matthew McCullough
If then, you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. . .