When Your Neighbor and Your Enemy Are the Same Person
"Who is my neighbor?" The answer to that question is far more inclusive than we tend to believe.
"Who is my neighbor?" The answer to that question is far more inclusive than we tend to believe.
In our retellings of the dramatic conversion of the Apostle Paul, we often get one pivotal detail wrong.
As we argue about who to vote for, one thing is clear: No president can save us.
Declaring that "Christ is King" is a fundamentally political statement. Recently, however, the nature of that political vision has been called into question.
Christians ought to be fundamentally oriented toward love of immigrants, regardless of whether they are documented or undocumented.
In a recent Instagram post, megachurch pastor Ed Young argued that Jesus was "a man’s man." Does he have a point?
I recently began curating a playlist I somewhat jokingly titled “Christian Music That Doesn’t Suck.” It doesn’t have very many songs on it.
I have plenty of problems with the American evangelical movement. And yet I still call myself an evangelical. Why?
In many evangelical circles, it is common to encourage Christians to “love the sinner, hate the sin.” Others disagree with that framework.
"Tayvis" has taken the world by storm. But the amount of outrage centered on the couple reveals just how cynical we have become.