Timothy George, Robert George and Eric Metaxas
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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.