For those of us experiencing turmoil of some kind, my advice is: cling to the Lord. Don’t let small breaches separate you from the people who love you.
Tim Keller, Tim Vreugdenhil, Stephan Pues, and René Breuel analyse what can the world learn from Europe about evangelism.
So much of our time is spent with entertainment and social media these days; we need to reengage with God’s Great Story not only on Sundays.
When we consider new ideas, our inner radar ponders, “Is it popular?” as much as “Is it true?”.
In challenging circumstances, European evangelicals share a message of hope.
I had tried a number of solutions. Buying a new mattress. Reducing caffeine. Eating better. I didn’t know what else to try until the major culprit revealed itself: technology.
Recently, I came across another delight: prayers that have been written by other people across the centuries.
A lot of our issues lie in the interpersonal domain. Relationships shape all of us, including the way we relate to ourselves and to God.
The COVID-19 pandemic is spreading suffering around the world – but it can also teach precious lessons to individuals, churches, and nations.
In mourning and in lockdown, believers may experience the power of Easter’s surprise: the arrival of someone who meets us in seclusion and whispers, “peace be with you”.
Exile can be fruitful and fertile when we see it as a season to build, to love, and to pray.
I lead a congregation in Rome that thrives on handshakes, greet kisses, and physical contact. This winter, the coronavirus has taught Italians the cautions of distance and isolation.
For many Christians outside the United States, American Evangelicals’ unwavering support for President Trump is bewildering.
In an era of polarized politics and dysfunctional governments, it is heartening to witness politicians act with courage, promptness, and moral clarity.
We are tempted to make our vocations a salvation project; to justify our souls with grand deeds.
There seem to be moments, every now and then, which grab us. An idea pops up in our mind, and it shines so bright and obvious that we wonder why we had never thought it before.
It would be wise to acknowledge what raw individualism takes away from us.
Here is where it gets interesting: they marry. And have kids. And Tim’s father dies.
Our grand truth arrives only with a definitive encounter: only when we meet our Creator.
Today secularist and religious camps have grown so far apart. In Einstein’s perspective, science and religion are not in contradiction,
Every virtuous person is flawed, and every flawed person has good character traits too. Let’s keep both in mind.
To believe or not to believe, that is not the question. The question, instead, is: what to believe?
For Christians the paradigmatic model of success served others and gave his life for our rescue.
One of the crucial steps to spiritual sanity is the realization that the devil exists.
If you want to search and know God, his church is crucial.
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