An Important Chapter That Calvin Added to the Second Edition of His ‘Institutes’
Anthony N. S. Lane
John Calvin did not have a chapter on the Christian life in the first, short edition of the Institutes (published in 1536), but he added a concluding chapter on this topic in the second edition.
Finding God in My Loneliness This Christmas
Lydia Brownback
In other words, loneliness is an indicator that something is missing, and that something is found only in Jesus Christ.
The Joy of Christmas
John Piper
Jesus has come to inaugurate that peace among God’s people and to unveil the true joy of Christmas.
How Does Being Created in the Image of God Change How We Think about Our Work?
Bryan Chapell
Because we're created in the image of God, reflecting him in what we do, we're also fulfilling his purposes for our lives.
What We Think We're Entitled to in the 21st Century
Andrew Wilson
We realized just how much we had assumed we would have, how many things we believed were almost rights of ours.
How to Motivate Our Churches for Gospel Witness
Brian A. DeVries
Every believer and every church is called to bear witness about Christ. But until motivated by the Spirit, our public witness is often weak and fickle.
One of the Church’s Greatest Needs
R. Kent Hughes
People outside the four walls of the church will eagerly embrace the faith of believers who model the honesty and integrity for which they long.
That Idol That You Love Doesn't Love You Back
Justin Buzzard
Everyone has to live for something and if that something isn’t the one true God, it will be a false God–an idol.
3 Imperatives for Christ’s Early Disciples (and for Us)
Nancy Guthrie
Repentance has always been and will always be the way into restored fellowship with God. It is turning away from self, away from whatever we’ve given our allegiance, and toward Christ.
Help! My Teen Struggles with Self-Image
Jen Oshman
From its beginning, the self-esteem movement has been crushing. And the movement hasn’t dissipated over the last generation or two, it has only intensified.
The Joy of Self-Denial
Derek W. H. Thomas,
John W. Tweeddale
For Calvin, self-denial was not a special requirement for the few but a norm for all believers, and we deny self because we have been united with God, not because we want to achieve such a union.
Podcast: Sourdough Starters, Daily Bread, and the Goodness of Jesus (Abigail Dodds)
A discussion with Abigail Dodds about what the mixture of flour, water, and yeast can teach us about God, the Bible, and what it really means to be satisfied by our Savior.
Podcast: Are You Aware of Your Own Blind Spots? (Collin Hansen)
What problems with our lives, priorities, and even theology do we not recognize? What would it look like to wake up to our own blind spots and to lovingly engage with those with whom we disagree?
You Can Change
Tim Chester
The problem with all of our desires to change is that they’re not ambitious enough.
Francis Chan: "Knowledge is essential, but not sufficient."
Francis Chan
Your brilliance is worthless if you’re not building up your brother—and even worse if you’re destroying him with your knowledge.
Podcast: 8 Questions to Ask Every Time You Open Your Bible (Matthew Harmon)
Questions we should ask when studying the Bible to help us get at the true meaning of Scripture, and how to apply it to our lives today.
Do You Feel Alone?
Paul David Tripp
We forget who we are, and when we do, we begin to give way to doubt, fear, and timidity. Identity amnesia makes you feel poor when in fact you are rich.
What Studying Old Conflict Can Teach Us
Tim Cooper
We seem to live in a world of increasing polarization in which the members of warring tribes address each other with remarkable vitriol in the online environment.
Learning Evangelism from G. K. Chesterton and C. S. Lewis
Dan DeWitt
Though we will likely never establish the sort of platform of Chesterton or Lewis, through their examples we may find the kind of confidence that compels us to cross our yard and begin a friendship with that neighbor who has made it clear that they don’t believe in God
Why You'll Never Grieve Well without Hope
Nancy Guthrie
To grieve well is to have a growing sense of confidence and rest that God's promises of resurrection, centered in the resurrected Jesus, are really true.
4 Things that Make the Bible Literary
Leland Ryken
The subject of literature is human experience. We should read the Bible through that lens.
Why Wisdom Is More than an Intellectual Pursuit
Graham A. Cole
To do theology we need to do with an attitude of reverence to the God who has made himself known in his Word.
4 Truths about Pentecost
Robert Letham
Our faith and all that flows from it in the Christian life is due to the Spirit, who renews us in the image of God and transforms us into Christ.
Podcast: Why Is Obeying God So Simple and Yet So Incredibly Hard? (David Gibson)
David Gibson talks about our struggle with obeying God's word and what that reveals about our sinful hearts, our theology, and our understanding of the Christian life.
Answering Kids’ Hardest Questions: Why Can’t I Have Screen Time All the Time?
Andrew T. Walker,
Christian Walker
There is no Bible verse that says, “Thou shalt not use an iPad,” or a commandment that says “You can have twenty-five minutes of screen time per day.”
Why Study the Books of Jonah, Micah, and Nahum?
Kristofer Holroyd
Each book of the Bible has something unique, something distinct, to teach us about God, about ourselves, and about the meaning of life.
What to Do with Mom Guilt on Mother's Day
Courtney Reissig
If you struggle with guilt over your parenting, consider that God does not require perfection from you.
The Economy’s 3 Essential Ingredients
Greg Forster
Economists are looking at things that people have to make trade-off decisions about. That includes material resources, time, and relationships.
Why Study the Books of 1–3 John
Michael LeFebvre
The more divisive, the more stressful, the more anxious, and the more lonely our society grows, the more compelling the need becomes for a clear exhortation to love.
Are Love and Authority Mutually Exclusive?
Jonathan Leeman
But authority in creation and authority and redemption actually work together—for good.