Eric Metaxas and David Carlson

Latest

  • Squawking Over Chick-fil-A

    In a better world, buying pens and eating lunch would be a politics-free experience. All that would matter is whether we're getting value for our money. Unfortunately, we're stuck with the one we have.

  • A Mainline Collapse: The Twilight of Liberal Christianity?

    Since 2000, the Episcopal Church has lost 23 percent of its members. At this rate, there will be no Episcopalians in 26 years.

  • The Grace Effect: Making the Case With Our Lives

    The best arguments against secular atheism and for Christianity are not made in the ivory tower; they're made at street level in every day life. Larry Taunton calls it the "grace effect."

  • God's Plan for Human Sexuality

    I'll bet you when most people think about the Christian view of sex, a whole host of "thou shalt nots" pops into their minds. And that's a shame.

  • We Could Use Some Rest: Busyness and Angst

    The busyness being complained about is "almost always...self-imposed: work and obligations they've taken on voluntarily, classes and activities they've 'encouraged' their kids to participate in."

  • Photoshopping a Fetus: Denying the Obvious

    The pro-choice worldview's logical conclusion is there for all to see: In order to maintain the supreme good of a woman's choice, pro-choicers must always and everywhere deny the humanity of the unborn child. Even when their own eyes tell them otherwise.

  • A Moment to Be Clear: Courage, Not Silence

    Evangelical Christians are in danger of tragically misapplying the gospel. It's a mistake we've seen before.

  • It Can Happen Here: Religious Freedom Threatened

    C'mon, is so-called gay "marriage" really a threat to religious freedom? Seriously? Christians are often asked by gay activists why they oppose same-sex "marriage." "How does our marriage hurt you?" they ask.

  • Lethal Foresight: Deciding Who Gets to Be Born

    Expecting parents may soon be able to find out the complete genetic makeup of their baby in utero. But should they?

  • Remedy for Restlessness, Part 2

    God's response to suffering and the doubt it produces did not consist of words and finely-crafted arguments but of a person, Jesus Christ. While Buddhism, for example, offers insight into the nature of suffering and its origins, Christianity offers a God who lived and died as one of us and then rose from the dead.