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Our Soured Romance with Overwork

Why we keep falling for overwork over and over again.

Written by Rishawn Biddle | Sunday, March 11, 2018

Even today, books and TED Talks are dedicated to proselytizing the benefits of working long and hard. Yet there is increasingly little evidence that working longer yields better results for anyone. The average American spends 50 minutes (10 percent of the working day) doing anything but work, according to an analysis of the American Time... Continue Reading

3 Reflections After My First Year As A Christian

I recently asked my friend “what are some things you’ve learnt and stuff that’s helped you in your first year as a Christian?” This is what she said…

Written by Eleanor Dell | Saturday, March 10, 2018

“After becoming a Christian I carried on reading the Bible, but the way I read it changed. Before, it felt like reading a story, but once I became a Christian, I realised I was reading words breathed out by the God who I believed and trusted in—words that were meant to comfort and guide me.”... Continue Reading

The 6 Songs Billy Graham Picked for His Funeral

The evangelist planned his own ceremony. Experts analyze the music he chose.

Written by Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra | Saturday, March 10, 2018

“To God Be the Glory” and “Because He Lives” bookend the sweet spot of evangelical hymnody: Fanny Crosby’s song is a classic example of the gospel hymn genre that was synonymous with the 19th-century revivals that birthed evangelicalism, while Bill Gaither’s song is a 20th-century hit of the same lineage.   As Billy Graham is... Continue Reading

Did You Know That Charles Spurgeon Struggled with Depression?

Being full of life in a fallen world must mean distress, and Spurgeon’s life was indeed full of physical and mental pain.

Written by Michael Reeves | Friday, March 9, 2018

Today he would almost certainly be diagnosed as clinically depressed and treated with medication and therapy. The depression could hit him so intensely that, he once said, “I could say with Job, ‘My soul chooseth strangling rather than life’ [Job 7:15]. I could readily enough have laid violent hands upon myself, to escape from my... Continue Reading

Preachers and Pulpit Confessions

A church full of “me too” may seem transparent, but it is more likely a church that is full of people who will not reach their full redemptive potential.

Written by Jay Bauman | Thursday, March 8, 2018

“Me too” teaching tends to do the very opposite of what it intends. Instead of causing us as Christian leaders to identify with our people at a deeper level, it often causes us to identify with them primarily in terms of our sin, rather than in terms of the good news. It frequently damages community... Continue Reading

The Science of Overwork

How breaks can help you break through.

Written by Erin Wildermuth | Thursday, March 8, 2018

Overwork kills your creativity because an idle brain is anything but idle. When you take time to rest, your Default Network lights up, connecting pieces of your brain that don’t usually talk to one another. The result is often bursts of inspiration and creativity.   In the 2007 film “Music and Lyrics,” an absent-minded lyricist... Continue Reading

William Cowper – “A Stricken Deer”

We can learn much about mental illness and Christian compassion from Cowper's life and his friendship with John Newton

Written by Simonetta Carr | Monday, March 5, 2018

 In spite of Cowper’s distrust of his own salvation, Newton never doubted it for a moment. He was just “astonished and grieved” by the pain his friend was suffering. “My dear friend still walks in darkness,” he wrote. “I can hardly conceive that anyone in a state of grace and favor with God can be... Continue Reading

Why We Need Christian Friends Who “Get In Our Face” In Love

We need an honest, perceptive, prayerful friend who will “get in our face” in love when needed.

Written by Chuck Lawless | Sunday, March 4, 2018

An “in your face” friend is often also an “on my knees” friend. The same friends who confront us lovingly often regularly intercede for us. They care that much. In our sin, we become obstinate. Even if our sin is seemingly private and unknown, it affects us in some way. Others who know us well can recognize... Continue Reading

The Story Behind Billy Graham’s Prison-Built Casket

Why is Billy Graham going to be buried in a plywood casket built by prisoners in Louisiana?

Written by Byron R. Johnson | Friday, March 2, 2018

The plain wood coffins are made of plywood and were lined with mattress pads made from Walmart comforters covered by fabric. They are adorned with brass handles and a cross on top and are said to cost $215. According to the former warden of Angola, the Graham family also asked that all of the inmates... Continue Reading

Leadership Lessons from Billy Graham

A lesson from biographies: Our greatest strengths are bound to be our greatest weaknesses.

Written by Kevin DeYoung | Tuesday, February 27, 2018

The lesson I come back to after all good biographies is the same: our greatest strengths are bound to be our greatest weaknesses. We can see how inattention to nuance and ambiguity go along with self-confidence and visionary plans, just like “going along to get along” is the underbelly of being a profoundly likeable person.... Continue Reading

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