John Stonestreet and Heather Peterson
Latest
Confused souls find rest in God’s image
The new sexual orthodoxy encourages hurting young people to change what shouldn’t be changed and discourages them from working on the things that they can work on.
Join in 30 Days of Prayer for the Muslim World
The Book of James tells us that the effectual prayer of a righteous man avails much. This has been a movement of prayer of hundreds of thousands of Christians for decades. Let’s be a part of it.
Losing ourselves
In other words, things that were once considered wrong are now considered right, and things that were once considered right are now considered wrong.
Rescuing the victims of the sexual revolution
There used to be a time when fatherlessness was considered a tragedy. Now, raising a child without a father or, in some cases, without a mother is a perfectly acceptable intentional choice.
Should singles adopt? Redeeming brokenness instead of creating it
The fundamental assumptions of a Christian worldview are straightforward. Right and wrong are grounded in eternal truths, not subject to the whims of a person or a culture.
The Equality Act: What to know and what to do
You should only care about the Equality Act if you are a Christian, or a person of faith, or a woman, or own a business, or run a nonprofit, or go to school, or teach at a school, or are a medical or mental-health professional, or (especially) are a female athlete, or under the age of 18, or ever use a public restroom.
Ravi Zacharias and the infinite human capacity to deceive ourselves
There is no sugar-coating, excusing, or explaining away Ravi’s behavior. It was sinful. It was wicked. And, as this report made crystal clear, it was duplicitous. As St. Paul wrote, “There is none righteous, no not one.”
Justice: When postmodern ideas cause Christians to abandon the biblical call
God cares about justice. One of the great contributions of Christianity to human history is the very idea that all people should be treated justly. The problem is that radical, problematic views undergird so many calls for justice today.
Can we separate the good Ravi Zacharias did from his sin?
Like so many others, I’m devastated. There is no sugar-coating, excusing, or explaining away Ravi’s behavior. It was sinful. It was wicked.
What if what we saw at the Capitol is us?
We are not a moral nation. We are lawless. We are not a nation that cultivates the kinds of families able to produce good citizens