As you are forming your own response to the situation we find ourselves in, there is no other book that presents the challenge in a more formidable way. (Fiction)
All in Culture
As you are forming your own response to the situation we find ourselves in, there is no other book that presents the challenge in a more formidable way. (Fiction)
We believe that God is faithful, that hope is our lifeblood, and that the future is bound up not in our past but in God’s work of transformation.
The most pressing question for me is, how are we supposed to navigate the challenge of pastoral care?
As we endeavor to correct unconscious bias and ultimately lean into what it means to be more Christlike, I invite you both personally and in your faith communities to consider the following three statements.
This global pandemic doesn’t have to wreck your church, but it will reveal your church’s latent leadership strengths or weaknesses.
I often wonder if the modern church is an adaptation of Christianity. Has the church modified Christianity in such a way that it does not look like the original masterpiece?
Should your church cancel worship services and other corporate gatherings? Here is how we are thinking through that question at my church.
Inclusion means that the congregation embraces the inherent value in all voices and seeks to make them an active part of the whole.
Bryant models to us that leaders celebrate the wins of other winners, even if the win is greater than theirs.
There may be no better text for preaching in divisive cultural moments than the book of Ephesians. Here, the church sees a picture of all-encompassing unity.
Factions from both sides of the aisle find reasons to believe their opponent is the devil’s minion or the devil incarnate.
Have your neighbors, coworkers, or classmates over for a meal. Just pick a family out of your world and host them in your home.
What cues for a negative stereotype are we sending out often without even knowing it? And how can we create a culture that will maximize learning for all kinds of people? (Nonfiction)
I do not know what the future holds for these kids, but my gifts to them are no longer about Christmas; they’re a statement of my hopes and dreams that they will be great.
Jesus reveals that true leadership is about taking responsibility for others, not amassing authority for ourselves. As the church, what image of kingship do we promote?
When the Son of Man comes, will he find the kind of faith that nags at an unjust system even when it feels like the cards are stacked against what is right?
In these three graphic volumes you have the very personal recounting of the civil rights movement. (Nonfiction)
True growth comes not from questions of defense, but questions about how to reach a dark world with the light of Jesus.
There is no doubt in my mind that everything done that day was a reflection of God pushing us out of fear and into productivity and resilience.
To operate under the assumption that we all encounter injustice in the same way diminishes the strength that comes when we purposefully stand up for each other.