If you are beating yourself up because of something you said or did, it is time to accept God’s forgiveness, move on, and do better.
If you are beating yourself up because of something you said or did, it is time to accept God’s forgiveness, move on, and do better.
Women, the poor, minorities, the disabled, environmental and human rights advocates—all these draw their moral force from the power of the gospel unleashed at the cross, when God took the side of the victim.
Do you think your spiritual leaders’ prayers are more likely to be heard by God than your prayers? How does prayer work?
Jesus reestablished the original link between the seen and unseen worlds and revealed a newly intimate side to God and his point of view.
Why doesn’t God intervene to rectify various earthly dilemmas? Philip Yancey presents a thought-provoking image of God’s perspective as a partial answer to that question.
God doesn’t need our bodies to access our minds. As Tennyson wrote in a poem, “closer is He then breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.”
Jesus presents the journey of faith as a personal pilgrimage begun in uncertainty and fragile trust. As we act according to God’s will we form common ground with Him and our assurance grows.
If you find yourself asking God why bad things happen in your life, this article is for you.
For many people, it takes the jolt of tragedy, illness, or death to create an existential crisis of faith. At such a moment, we want clarity while God wants our trust. How do we respond?
Everywhere we go we can encourage people, building them up, challenging them to reach for new heights. God has given us this assignment to love.