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Home/Laura Kilgore

Emotions Make Terrible Gods

Taking Control of Our Feelings

Written by Greg Morse | Thursday, January 24, 2019

short of rolling on the floor, we deem it better to express any and all emotions rather than hold back and become “fake.” No other options exist. Our unfiltered emotional life can, and some say should, extend to any and all persons — spouses, parents, or strangers included. Some even commend yelling at God when... Continue Reading

Why Christian Movies Are So Terrible

The paint-by-numbers aesthetic of the new wave of Christian movies persists in making the faith appear trite, inauthentic, corny, and -- worst of all, as far as the culture goes -- uncool.

Written by Jared C. Wilson | Thursday, January 24, 2019

I know, I know — people always try to come up with exceptions. But there aren’t any, really. Every now and again some well-meaning brother or sister will say to me, “This one’s different. You gotta see it. It’s not like the others.” And then it is. It painfully, painfully is. Why does it seem... Continue Reading

The Disease of Ambition

Ahab refuses to bow before God even when God turns his fury on him in Moby Dick.

Written by Bruce Baugus | Thursday, January 24, 2019

Ahab is Melville’s picture of mortal greatness in the world, a man defined by ambition that only he and God seem to know. This is precisely how Melville introduces Ahab. The first we hear about him is from Peleg, a Nantucket Quaker, former whaling captain himself, and now, along with Bildad, majority owner of the... Continue Reading

What Preaching Christ From All Of Scripture Does And Does Not Mean

There are versions of this approach that, because of the desire to lead the congregation to Christ, probably do not do justice to particular texts of Scripture.

Written by R. Scott Clark | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

It is possible to turn a text into a springboard, as an opportunity to say what the preacher really wants to say. This is a genuine danger in all forms of topical preaching when the text of Scripture does not govern and drive the sermon. Preachers have been known to pass over the original intent... Continue Reading

Edmund Grindal and His Letter to the Queen

Unlike the Roman bishop he had taken as example, Grindal didn’t prevail over the queen, who had a hard time settling for a suspension and continued to press for a full demotion.

Written by Simonetta Carr | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

The 56-year old archbishop was well aware of the likely consequences of this challenge to the queen’s orders, but he was bound by his conscience and by God’s word which, he believed, gave him “no power to destroy, but to edify.”[2]“Bear with me, I beseech you, Madam,” he concluded, “if I choose rather to offend... Continue Reading

Is it a Sin to Miss Church?

“Even if I had tickets to see the Bears in the Superbowl on a Sunday morning, I wouldn’t go…”

Written by Adriel Sanchez | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Yes, there are extraordinary circumstances that keep the sheep from hearing the voice of the Shepherd on a Sunday morning through a called preacher. But ordinarily speaking, to neglect Christian fellowship and the means of grace through which God grants us communion with himself is a terrible sin. And not only is it itself a... Continue Reading

Why the Church Needs to Pray the Imprecatory Psalms

Jesus' command to love and pray for our enemies does not serve as a "trump card" over all the prayers of imprecation in the Bible.

Written by Barry York | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

“Remember, O Lord, against the Edomites the day of Jerusalem, how they said, ‘Lay it bare, lay it bare, down to its foundations!’ O daughter of Babylon, doomed to be destroyed, blessed shall he be who repays you with what you have done to us! Blessed shall he be who takes your little ones and dashes... Continue Reading

The Strongest Men Are Gentle

Gentleness is the life-giving exercise of strength.

Written by David Mathis | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Power in its various forms is a good gift from God, to be used by his people for the ends of his kingdom. And like other good gifts, power is perilous when wielded improperly. The answer to the dangers of strength is not its loss, but the gaining of a Christian virtue called gentleness.   One... Continue Reading

Like an Angel: The Shining Face of Stephen

“And gazing at him, all who sat in the council saw that his face was like the face of an angel” (Acts 6:15).

Written by David Huffstutler | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

The alteration of Stephen’s face was an act of God to make it shine. The purpose for doing so seems to be along the lines of what took place with Moses—just as the shining of Moses’ face indicated to Israel that Moses spoke on behalf of God because he spoke directly to Him, so also the shining of... Continue Reading

Ecclesial Theology

A division between ecclesial theology and academic theology has emerged.

Written by Gerald Hiestand | Wednesday, January 23, 2019

From where I sit, academic theology is theology written to the wider academic community, set within an academic context, and driven by academic concerns and presuppositions. Ecclesial theology, on the other hand, is theological reflection written to the believing community, for the good of the church catholic, and born out of pastoral/ecclesial concerns.   Throughout... Continue Reading

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