Can Breadwinner Wives Be Happy?
That's the central question of Sandra Tsing Loh's latest Atlantic essay. As a stay-at-home wife, I have a few suggestions.
In many ways, Sandra Tsing Loh and I couldn’t be more different. The Atlantic writer is feminist, liberal, foul-mouthed, and cosmopolitan. At 50 years old, she has a successful career and a boyfriend. I, on the other hand, am not too many steps removed from what my college friend called “a prairie muffin.” You know, the stay-at-home Christian mom who bakes whole wheat goodies while wearing a modest denim dress.
Paul’s Rebuke of Red-Letter Christians
Why does Paul list the “I am of Christ” faction alongside all the others factions in 1 Cor 1?
At the end of the day, we do not have access to an unmediated Jesus. Jesus didn’t write a single New Testament book. We know Jesus because of the apostolic word handed down to us in the scriptures. Thus, to play Jesus off against his appointed spokesmen is a contest that neither Jesus nor the... Continue Reading
If You Think You’ve Arrived……
What are the lifestyle tendencies of a pastor ministering from a position of arrival?
Let's be honest. There are too many power struggles in the local church. Gospel ministry easily becomes politicized. Pride causes you to hunger for power (even though you may not know it). The hunger for power causes you to collect ministry allies, and the desire for control causes you to locate ministry enemies. Somehow, some way, gospel ministry has become a political battleground for human power.
Can a president really fix America?
Christians, progressive and conservative alike, may be expecting more from politics than politics can deliver
Our politicians and laws reflect the morality of America's citizenry. Does it not, then, seem more effective for social change for pastors to admonish Christians to focus on pointing their neighbors to Christ? The social change that Christians truly want in America will come when we, the people, desire to live according to our Creator's design.
Church of Scotland to seize back Glasgow church in gay clergy row
St George's Tron voted to leave last June after denomination allowed gay ministers in its pulpits
The Presbytery of Glasgow says it will "take all necessary steps to recover all property and assets, including the church and manse buildings, and all monies belonging to the Church of Scotland congregation of St George's Tron". (Editor's note: Sinclair Ferguson, Senior Minister at First Presbyterian, Columbia, SC, had been pastor of this church from 1998 to 2003, when he moved to the U. S.)
What’s In a Metaphor? Cultural Conflict and 2K Again
Continuing the debate and refining the terms on cultural engagement
One of my longstanding concerns has been the need for an approach to political pluralism in which people of faith are welcome to bring their convictions about morality, human dignity, and the nature of a just society to relevant discussions in the public square, to make their arguments in a publicly accessible way, and to... Continue Reading
Why Men Still Hate Going to Church
An Interview with David Murrow
I get more pushback from men who are well-established in the church than I do from women. Women sense the need. Women see their husbands bored. They see their sons dropping out. They see their brothers irreligious. They sit on the pew with nine other women. They know the situation on the ground. ... Continue Reading
Irish Hymn Writers Keith & Kristyn Getty Launch ‘Hymns For The Christian Life’
The album is highlighted by a special 10th anniversary recording of "In Christ Alone"
Hymns for the Christian Life was produced by Charlie Peacock (The Civil Wars, Switchfoot) and Ed Cash (Chris Tomlin, Kari Jobe) and explores such themes as work, family, money, community and social action, showcasing Irish melodies as well as American bluegrass and country music influences. Preeminent Irish modern hymn writers and recording artists... Continue Reading
Canada Cuts All Non-Christian Prison Chaplains
The Canadian government is canceling the contracts of all non-Christian chaplains at federal prisons
Currently, there about 80 full-time chaplains serving the federal prison system; all are Christian except for one Muslim. There are about 100 part-time chaplains, 20 of them non-Christian, according to CBC News. The total cost of the chaplaincy program is about $6.4 million a year. It’s not clear how much will be saved by the... Continue Reading
Farewell to the American Protestant Majority
The survey says we have a 48 percent plurality of Protestants; is this a cause for concern?
We should be more concerned about the loss of a Christian majority in the Protestant churches than about the loss of a Protestant majority in the United States. Most of the old-line Protestant denominations are captive to every theological fad that has blown through their divinity schools in the past thirty years-from crypto-Marxist liberation ideologies... Continue Reading