La muerte y resurrecciĂłn de Jesucristo son los eventos mĂĄs trascendentales de la fe cristiana. Ambos acontecimientos estĂĄn unidos y hacen posible...
My wife is remarkably hospitable â far more than I. For ten straight years at her instigation, we invited all of my enrolled college students over...
Life is replete with contrasts â especially as we approach Thanksgiving. Recalling the glorious refrain of King David in Psalm 136, "Give thanks to...
This morning I talked with someone who was describing some items on their bucket list. A âbucket list,â if you donât know the term, is âa list of...
Ăltimamente he escuchado con bastante frecuencia a muchos lĂderes cristianos afirmar que la fe en Cristo es lo mĂĄs importante de todo y que todo lo...
The 16th century church was in dire need of a Reformation. What about today, a half millennium later? Is the 21st century church due for another Reformation, a Re-Reformation? Professor Williams shares his thoughts ...
My students in Exegesis In The Gospels (a second-year Greek course) were delighted to discover that (in the words of one news agency) âChristian conspiracy theorists have gathered clues that suggest the end of the world is nigh" ...
For many years I have been curious about a Roman governor known to us from history as Pliny the Younger. My interest initially arose because I resided for four years in one of the principal cities he governedânot to mention that one of my four daughters was born in that city. Moreover, since I have expended significant effort studying the writings of the earliest Christian authors after the period of the apostles (those authors known as the âApostolic Fathersâ), I continue to be intensely interested in learning anything I possibly can about the lives of Christians who lived during the first half of the second century ...
When we say âHe is risen. He is risen indeed!â we are not merely stating a remarkable historical fact, not merely expressing our shared doctrine, not merely standing in line with a long tradition of hope. We are doing all of that. But we are doing more. We are joining the great protest chant against all the dehumanization, death, and decay of the present age and heralding, here and now, the subversive breaking in of the glorious age to come in the resurrected Jesus.
What happened on Good Friday is so scandalous and profound that the Bible does not limit itself to a single explanation. Dutch theologian, Herman Bavinck, explains, â[T]he work of Christ is so multifaceted that it cannot be captured in a single word nor summarized in a single formula." âMultifacetedâ is exactly the right word for the cross. It brings to mind the image of a giant deep-cut diamond, a unity with a multiple facets, each refracting rays off and through the other. Letâs take one lap around this flawless wonder and look at six things to celebrate this Friday and every day...
Undoubtedly, Christians in America should be commended for the growth of missions in the last two to three decades, and specifically the growth in short-term mission trips (STMs). In 1989, there were 120,000 American âshort-term missionaries.â This number has exploded to 2.2 million at a cost of $1.6 billion in 2006.[1] This statistic comes from authors Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert in their somewhat controversial book, When Helping Hurts: How to Alleviate Poverty without Hurting the Poor ⊠and Yourself. The natural question that the authors considerâand one that we all should as wellâis whether we are being good stewards of Godâs money and resources with each STM.