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Home/Miscellaneous

Faith Without Sight Is the Only Kind There Is

The deeper in we go, the more our measure of faith.

Written by Lore Ferguson Wilbert | Saturday, August 24, 2019

What I am asking is not a new question. It’s plagued theologians far wiser than me for generations. If we falter in faith, does God still save us? If, in a moment of doubt, we are swept away to face God, does he see the years of faith, the confessions of sin, the profession of... Continue Reading

Fixing Those Idiots

We need to be more aware of how our words reflect upon our hearts and on our Christ.

Written by Mike Leake | Sunday, August 18, 2019

Go ahead and scroll through your favorite feed and tell me that people aren’t continually berating, belittling, mocking, and smearing each other. They are, and Jesus has a word for that – murder. Matthew 5:21-22 is absolutely clear that anger and name-calling are the fruit of murderous hearts. To avoid confusion let me say, I’m... Continue Reading

Some Things Are Worth Doing Poorly

As G.K. Chesterton put it, “If a thing is worth doing, it’s worth doing badly.”

Written by Seth Lewis | Saturday, August 17, 2019

I’ve been wanting to get better at scheduling more intentional one-on-one time with each of my children. Life keeps pushing in on my idea, though, and it’s easy to put it off and say “after this week, things will be different” or “this is just a crazy couple of months”, while waiting for some magical... Continue Reading

Narratives of Surprising Conversions

The blood is offensive. But there is power in it.

Written by Jared C. Wilson | Saturday, August 17, 2019

That night dear Billy got up and started at Genesis and went right through the whole Bible and he talked about every single blood sacrifice you can imagine. The blood was just flowing all through Great St. Mary’s everywhere for three-quarters of an hour. And both my neighbors were terribly embarrassed by this crude proclamation... Continue Reading

Pastoring Through the Dark Night of the Soul

I’ve faced some dark nights of the soul, and I’m facing some more as I stand in the gap for my church, but it’s worth it.

Written by Matt Henslee | Saturday, August 3, 2019

If you can think of the worst thing that can happen to one of your members, something even worse may stare at you in the dark of night. The Scriptures call us to weep with those who weep and rejoice with those who rejoice. And if we have any heart at all, we’ll find the empathy... Continue Reading

Where a Desperate Small-Town Pastor Found Hope

In ministry, God lets us grow hungry so we realize how desperately we need him.

Written by Chad Ashby | Sunday, July 28, 2019

God intentionally lets us grow hungry so that we realize how desperately we need him. If he does not speak the word, we will perish. If he does not prosper the gospel, it will fail. It’s this same sense of wild-eyed desperation that we hear in the voice of Peter in response to Jesus’s question:... Continue Reading

Reframing Kindness

Our kindness as Christians must be of a different stripe than how the world sees and spells compassion.

Written by Andrew Roy Croft | Saturday, July 27, 2019

Christians are called to show good kindness, modelled on God’s kindness. It is a compassion which doesn’t pay things forward, which isn’t interested in personal outcome, which isn’t predicated on the worthiness of the recipient, or their intellectual affinity with us. It is a love which tramples boundaries, which upends expectations, which hands a tunic... Continue Reading

A Short History of “Emotion”

Contemporary Evangelicals tend to conflate the concepts of affection and emotion. To do so is very dangerous.

Written by David de Bruyn | Sunday, July 14, 2019

In the premodern Christian tradition, love as an affection could therefore be appropriate or inappropriate, since love could be rightly or wrongly directed. The object of desire determined if it was right to desire such a thing, and necessarily dictated the moral quality of the affection. This changed in the 1700s. In eighteenth-century Germany, a third... Continue Reading

The Roots of Political Correctness

Political correctness must be defeated the moment it is expressed.

Written by Bradley J. Birzer | Saturday, July 13, 2019

Over the last thirty years, political correctness has metastasized. Today, so many politically-correct assumptions have become mainstream that, as Tocqueville once predicted, they have narrowed our questions and our ability to question rather than actually tell us the exact answers to things. Is there a solution? Of course, but it will take immense time and work.... Continue Reading

Why Men Can Speak on Abortion

You don’t need experiential knowledge of pregnancy or womanhood in order to possess moral knowledge.

Written by Aaron Brake | Sunday, July 7, 2019

The underlying problem with the abortion-choice slogan “no uterus, no opinion” is that it equivocates between propositional knowledge and experiential knowledge. How so? When the abortion-choice advocate says something like “You’re a man” or “Men can’t get pregnant,” I understand them to be making the following claim: Men cannot know what it is like to... Continue Reading

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