Worshipping through the crisis
Whether we can shout, whisper or only mouth along, when we worship, God moves.
Whether we can shout, whisper or only mouth along, when we worship, God moves.
Beth Moore has asked Christians for forgiveness if she was "complicit" in making complementarianism a litmus test for faith.
Exploring faith doesn't require us to leave our brains at the door. In fact, it should take us on a journey to Christianity, not away from it.
Jesus' crestfallen followers changed dramatically when they encountered Him unexpectedly on the road to Emmaus. The same can happen to us today.
Carl Thomas, the new head of XXXChurch, is frustrated by the lack of support for Christians struggling with porn addiction.
Tim Keller says he lived "in denial" about death and only "half-believed in the resurrection" until cancer forced him to re-examine his faith.
It's time that this remarkable woman got the recognition she deserves.
Bede recognised that the fulcrum of time was indeed to be identified with a point in Augustus Caesar's reign - the birth of Jesus, writes Tom Holland.
As excruciatingly difficult as it must be in the face of prolonged suffering, an answer to this question may never come.
Jesus has given us a glimpse of God's future and it is going to be infinitely better than anything we experience at the moment.
During this pandemic, our homes and relationships have been changed forever, and insecurity, uncertainty and anxiety have become daily companions as a result. With that in mind, re-entry into our post-lockdown world might be harder than we think, writes Kintsugi Hope's Simon Barrington.
Christian women were encouraged to let go of their fears during the pandemic and trust in God at Jesus House's Uncommon Woman conference over the weekend.
The Bible's Society's new Navigating Trauma programme is rooted in mental health best practice and uses contextual Bible reading to help people explore what Scripture has to say about suffering, and God's relationship with those who have experienced trauma.