How Do I Figure This Money Thing Out?

Sometimes it isn’t how much we make but our attitude toward what we have been given that makes the difference.

Sabbath Fits: Date Nights and Family Time

Now that I’m in midlife, I find Sabbaths all the more important.

The Gaps Between Us: What Keeps Men and Women from Healthy Ministry Partnerships

What keeps us from building solid, thriving ministry partnerships between women and men?

How Can I Care About the Whole World?

God does not stop hearing the cries of the afflicted when our news feed changes topic.

Sabbath Fits: Cooking and Connecting

As a creative person, my Sabbath involves items that draw me closer to the presence of God in creative ways.

Making Sense of Christianity’s Branches: Meet a Charismatic

As Charismatic Christianity affirms all the gifts of the Holy Spirit, believers can hear from God in multiple ways. God can speak through dreams, visions, prophetic words, or listening prayer. We see many examples of this in Scripture.

Making Sense of Christianity’s Branches: Meet a Non-Denominationalist

Although non-denom churches can be difficult to explain and define, I find them easy to justify. Non-denominational churches exist because God’s people are diverse and his passions include the entire earth. Some of us just don’t fit into a denominational box. 

Making Sense of Christianity’s Branches: Meet an Anglican

Anglicans have learned to see the churning conflict of each generation as an opportunity for worship, witness, and welcome. Sometimes articulated as via media or “the middle way,” Anglicans blur the lines between Protestant and Catholic, Reformed and Anabaptist, liberal and evangelical. This is our church’s greatest strength as well as its most profound weakness.

Making Sense of Christianity’s Branches: Meet a Lutheran

In terms of denominational origin stories, it’s hard to get more dramatic than Lutheranism.

Making Sense of Christianity’s Branches: Meet a Catholic

For those unfamiliar with Catholicism and its beliefs, it may seem complicated, antiquated, and full of ritual. But, having been raised in the Catholic Church, I recognize the ways I have been formed by its teachings and its history, and see ways that it has much to offer the broader Church.

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