Kirthundia and Christendom
What we do for the Lord, and for the sake of the gospel, matters in the grand scheme of God’s redemptive plan for creation.
What we do for the Lord, and for the sake of the gospel, matters in the grand scheme of God’s redemptive plan for creation.
Jesus lamented over the spiritual condition of Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum. Should we lament over the condition of the West?
In the life of every believer, from the beginning of church history up until our present day, a pitched battle has been fought between two kingdoms: the Kingdom of God and the kingdom of the self.
Can one man trigger a chain-reaction that destroys (or builds) a civilization?
We live in a world that dishonors marriage, but the writer of Hebrews exhorts us to honor it. What does the latter mean?
How are we to regard AI? Is AI unethical and/or dangerous? Can AI serve a noble, righteous end? Questions abound in this cultural fog.
Prayer changes things. When we pray, we are asking God to change things. And when He answers prayer, He does change things.
If you were to survey all of the titles in the “Self-Help” genre, you could probably begin to see how the world’s “wisdom” has been shared from culture to culture, language to language, epoch to epoch, and has converged into this one genre like a sticky mess of a hodgepodge.
The sun is reaching its solar maximum, people are worried about an “internet-apocalypse”, and since the pandemic we are again witnessing mass hysteria. In what, or who, do we place our trust?
We have rejected divine revelation as the basis of truths not only about God but about human nature, and in turn ignored it as the source of human understanding and human flourishing.