A weekly reading experience that brings you the best from the vast and growing world of online faith-based and faith-challenging writers.
Links to begin the week
You want to read but which books? There are examples of faith from Church History but how would you find them?
Lessons we can learn
This week’s links point to my post on getting a juicy bit a insider information, and links from my reading on suicide and heaven, the book of Jude, the book of Hebrews, C. S. Lewis, grace in a courtroom, why we should join a church, broken families and politics, an ancient Canaanite city, an Evangelical wins the Nobel peace prize, noise everywhere, letter writing, and deep reading.
These links point to my article on similarities between the books of Moses and the book of Joshua, and links from my readings about prayer, Iran, China, Africa, Hell, and more.
These links are to my article on C. S. Lewis’ doubts, personal holiness, reaching secular friends, a clean-up in Los Angeles, North Korea, patience, culture wars and children and more.
These links point to my post on why love is so important, lessons learned by a general on the battlefield, persecution, God in our hard times, missing father and violence, toxic relationships, and more
These links point to my post about God sending workers into the spiritual harvest as well as articles on faith, depression, suffering, choosing a spouse, and more
Jesus claims to be The Good Shepherd. What does that mean and how is described in the Bible?
These links point to my post on avoiding poverty and other articles on loved ones seeing us from heaven, the universe is designed for life, church membership, and more.
These links point to my posts on what the book of Romans is about and links from my readings on self-control, our children’s sin, missions, life after pardon from a life-sentence, persecution in China, declining church attendance, teenagers, Woodstock after 50 years, and Darwinism.
These links point to my post on humility in the Christian life, as well as articles on the rhythm of aloneness and community in the godly life, living as a Christian at college, a Yale professor who renounced Darwin, Christians who are leaving the faith, socialism, health benefits of going to church, and the possibility of being a gay Christian.