4 Things We Will Do in Heaven
What will we do in heaven? Oftentimes, behind this question is the fear that we will get bored. But nothing could be further from the truth.
What will we do in heaven? Oftentimes, behind this question is the fear that we will get bored. But nothing could be further from the truth.
In our retellings of the dramatic conversion of the Apostle Paul, we often get one pivotal detail wrong.
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.
Seemingly every Christmas, Christians argue over whether Jesus was a refugee. Was he? And does it matter if he was?
Rapture anxiety is a specific kind of religious trauma resulting from the existential dread of possibly being “left behind.”
For the most part, Christians have broad agreement about what constitutes as “sin.” However, that agreement isn’t universal.
In recent years, our culture experienced a crisis of identity when it comes to gender. In many ways, it has hit young men especially hard.