Honor Thy Immigrant
Where do I resist the digital age because it’s bad and where do I resist it because it’s different?
Where do I resist the digital age because it’s bad and where do I resist it because it’s different?
True self-acceptance is a key to change. A skewed self-acceptance refuses change.
Where we downplay the central role of the body in human experience, we downplay the role of the body in our own relationships with God.
I prefer to say I’m “on a journey.” But sometimes, that sounds a bit too certain, like I know where I started, where I am, and where and when I’ll . . .
We long for one who sees, one for whom our condition matters not because it defines us, but because it distorts who He knows us to be. And One who can make what He sees true in our lives.
You would think me bitter if I told you I would gladly trade places with him, the man. Although they’d stormed in on both of us, it was me they . . .
Into this, our story, steps Jesus. He is the author. And He is the plot twist.
Sin doesn’t grant you permission to do what you want. It gives you no option but to do what it wants. And worse yet, to believe the want has come from you.
I was recently given the daunting task to give a comprehensive lecture on the topic of sex within one hour. How could I possibly do justice to this topic in . . .
Like a cat with its tail on fire, we run thinking it’s a matter of self-preservation. But nothing could be further from the truth.