Church Leaders: Preparing the Church for Trying Times
How elders, deacons, and congregation can – and should – prepare for hard times.
How elders, deacons, and congregation can – and should – prepare for hard times.
If the church of Jesus Christ rises up to the challenge of HIV/AIDS, it will be the greatest apologetic the world has ever seen.
Good fiction has the potential to illuminate biblical truth, but not when it effectively supplants it. Walter Henegar reviews the bestselling novel, “The Shack.”
The success of the Harrison Center for the Arts in Indianapolis has attracted interest from all corners of the Christian landscape, and has become “a model for all of us who want to engage the culture.”
At its core, “Prince Caspian” is about belief versus doubt, a theme familiar to those who know the work of C.S. Lewis.
Anthony Carter speaks about the need for vibrant, experiential, Reformed Christianity among African-Americans.
Westminster Presbyterian Church offered a presentation by Nancy Pearcey on the growing pervasiveness of Darwinian and naturalistic thinking in virtually every area of society.
Sending believers into the world means preparing gifted people to be redemptive force in their respective fields.
The debate over church marketing illustrates the tension between confronting the culture and accommodating it.
Wellspring, a ministry of the Western North Carolina Presbytery, hopes to drill water wells in every North Korean province.