The Bible Is an Onion, not a Lemon
Some of us approach the Bible like a lemon — something to squeeze quickly for an easy takeaway. But Scripture is more like an onion: layered, textured, asking for patience. Its message is clear enough for anyone to meet God, yet deep enough to keep drawing us further in. Reading well means slowing down, peeling back assumptions and letting the mystery of God shape us over time.
Da Vinci Is Not Hanging in the Louvre: The Creator/Creature Distinction
It’s tempting to blur God into nature, into ourselves, into everything — until the Creator becomes just another part of creation. But Scripture insists on a difference: God is the artist, we are the art. The mountains are radiant, but they are not God. Holding the Creator-creature distinction protects wonder without collapsing into worship of ourselves or the world. Da Vinci isn’t hanging in the Louvre — and neither is God.
The Year Faith-Based Films Finally Grew Up: The Top 10 Movies Of 2025
In 2025, faith-based movies didn’t just get louder — they got better. The big releases still gave audiences what they came for, but the craft finally started catching up to the subject matter. Meanwhile, Hollywood kept circling religion with fresh seriousness, especially in horror and thrillers. For the first time, this list isn’t about picking the least embarrassing option — it’s about choosing between genuinely good films.
The Story of the Christian Canon
A Baptist buys a Bible without wondering who decided these books belong together. A Catholic opens a hotel Bible and senses something missing. A student discovers extra pages in the “required” Bible for class and panics. Canon questions have been hiding in plain sight. Canon once meant a reed — a measuring stick — and eventually, a standard. The canon is the Church’s straight edge for truth.
Reversing the Explosion: the Big Bang, but Backward
Playing the universe backward, everything rushes toward a beginning it never had to have. Possibility narrows to a single point where nothing should exist — and yet something does.
One Body, Many Parts: What Is a Church?
Somehow God builds a church out of people who’d never choose each other on their own. Corinth was proof of that — sailors and scholars, the devout and the jaded, all learning to live as one body. Paul’s image still holds. A church is less a polished institution than a family gathered around a table, each person wanted, each part needed, every difference woven into something unexpectedly whole.
Anchored in the Eternal: How God Becomes Our Safe Harbor
Peace doesn’t rise from our efforts, or from searching our own hearts for something solid. It comes from knowing the God who has already moved toward us in love. At the cross, we see his heart laid bare — holiness without harshness, sovereignty without distance, justice wrapped in mercy. Let that glimpse of God steady you. Anchor yourself there, where his character becomes your calm.
Everything is Spiritual
The sacred doesn’t start when the music does on Sunday morning; it starts when you wake up, when you breathe, when you create, when you serve.
Storytelling: The Power of Our Testimonies
Every one of us carries a story that only makes sense when seen through God’s eyes. The heartbreaks, failures and long detours — He’s been in all of it, redeeming, reworking, rebuilding. When we tell our stories truthfully, the light gets in. Others see him, not just us. And somehow, our scars start to heal. Because with God, every story turns toward glory.
Church: The Case for & Against Community
We crave freedom from others — until isolation exposes our need for them. The myth of independence tells us we’ll find truth alone, but our souls were made for relationship.
Dreaming Bigger by Asking Better Questions
Good questions are like keys, flashlights, even shovels. They unlock new doors, shine light on hidden places, and unearth treasures buried just beneath the surface. Unlike questioning, which often carries suspicion, true question-asking is about discovery, curiosity and growth. It’s a posture, not a checklist. And when practiced with wisdom, it doesn’t just improve conversations — it reshapes our relationships, our work and the direction of our lives.
What’s ‘Good’? And How Do We Know It?
What makes something “good”? We say things like “sex is dangerous” and “marijuana is evil” — but we rarely stop to ask, What does God call good?
The Cracks That Let In The Light Of God
Some weekends just catch you off guard — not with fireworks, but with God showing up in quiet, unexpected ways. A biker rally. A conversation about grace. A priest who met God on mushrooms. The Spirit moves how he wants, through whoever he wants. None of us sees the whole picture, but sometimes, through the cracks in this world, the light gets in. And that’s enough.
Why Do Our Bibles Keep Changing?
Bible translations don’t change because the message shifts, but because language does — and so does scholarship. New discoveries and evolving usage lead to periodic updates. That’s not a threat to Scripture; it’s part of its careful preservation. Even Crossway’s English Standard Version, once declared “final,” is now being updated again. These changes remind us how God’s Word is both rooted in history and actively stewarded in the present.
How Come Some Catch the Spark of Faith and Others Do Not?
Some people get knocked sideways by hardship and walk away from faith. Others get hit harder and lean in. Their trust deepens. They hold fast. It’s always made me wonder — why them? Why does the spark catch for one person and not another? Maybe grace has a mind of its own. Maybe some just catch a glimpse of God so real, they never forget what they saw.
Some Churches Are Driven By Fear, Others By Love
Some churches teach us to fear — fear the world, fear sin, fear those who are different. But Jesus taught something else entirely. “They will know you by your love.” Real faith means loving our neighbors, not condemning them. Fear breeds fury. Love brings healing. As David French writes, we need churches that act as a balm, not a blowtorch.
Small Things & Great Love
In a world obsessed with applause, two men have stayed faithful where few were watching. Maybe that’s what the kingdom of God mostly is: quiet faithfulness for the glory of the One who never forgets.
Where True Joy Comes From
We chase joy like it’s something to catch, but maybe it’s something to release. The more we try to fill ourselves up, the emptier we get. The more we give ourselves away, the more God fills in.
What is Your ‘Christian Witness’?
Your life speaks louder than your words. Your Christian witness is about living with Christ so clearly that your kindness, humility and Spirit-shaped character actually point people to him.
Lent In America
Lent is here, but for most Americans, it’s barely a blip on the radar. Around a quarter observe the 40-day season of fasting and preparation before Easter, while most do not. Those who participate often fast from food, habits or activities — but for many, Lent isn’t about rules. It’s a time to refocus their hearts on Christ through prayer, generosity and devotion.