Mankind. An oxymoron? A question? One part man, less parts kind, One wonders what peace there we can find …
All in Culture
Mankind. An oxymoron? A question? One part man, less parts kind, One wonders what peace there we can find …
Let me suggest some ways that all of us—including preachers and church leaders—should be making disciples.
The thing I am most haunted by are my clients who have been harmed by the church. The church should never be a stumbling block to recovery.
We must start teaching sexual ethics with consent at the forefront of the discussion. If we don’t, we are actively teaching unhealthy sexual practices.
All too familiar faces appeared, interviewing familiar experts who provided analysis of an all too familiar event: another school shooting.
Zombies are all the rage these days. They are the dead who will not stay dead, the dead who feed on life, the dead who must be killed again—and again.
I can't keep sending my clients out into the world where fat is a word we spell because we are too afraid to speak it.
Now that we’ve looked at all four texts with some detail, it seems appropriate to take a step or two back and reflect on the bigger picture that has developed in our study.
For the church to be effective in countering any kind of abuse, we must recognize commonalities and risk factors, and act swiftly and with purpose.
I’ve learned that reading is more than objectively assessing the cards lying face-up on the table.
Today, we conduct Wrestle Mania II as we reexamine these cards, continue wrestling with the evidence, and seek to understand a second possible conclusion.
There is a machine that exists today that threatens all of humanity. It is a machine that we created, but now it spins wildly out of control and for the most part, we remain unaware or apathetic.
Domestic violence is on the church’s radar. Perhaps this is due to the cultural moment we are living in, increased reporting from victims, or the work of the Holy Spirit.
What did these texts communicate in their cultural and literary contexts? Today we examine one response
That goal to "just be happy/joyful" is one of the biggest reasons my clients wind up clinging to disordered behavior.
There is a sort of madness in Christianity these days. And not just the fact that everyone seems to be mad.
Why bother with cultural and literary contexts when we can read scripture and understand its “obvious” meaning? In concise terms, shortcuts can be dangerous.
When reading Scripture we face some questions: does this text state a principle that transcends time and culture? Or does this text wrap cultural clothing around primary principles?
Even if we start teaching from the pulpit that women have value, it’s in the pews that a toxic view of women often resides.
What does wisdom theology have to do with questions surrounding same-sex attraction?