Trevor Laurence
Corporate worship is embodied catechesis. More than a context for expressing the contents of our hearts, more than…
Trevor Laurence
Corporate worship is embodied catechesis. More than a context for expressing the contents of our hearts, more than…
Michael F. Bird
To profess that Jesus is Lord is to make no empty claim. It is the singular most important…
Matthew Kaemingk
When it comes to work and worship, we might not expect too much from the book of Psalms…
David Koyzis
When I was 21 years old, I had an opportunity to visit what was then called Czechoslovakia, still…
Trevor Laurence
The narratives of Jesus’ birth and infancy are full of references to promises, prophecies, and patterns from the…
Helen Paynter
Around this time last year, my cousin had a baby. This, of course, is hardly unusual in itself…
W. David O. Taylor
The beginning of the church year arrives yet again. After a year of pestilence, violence, vigilante justice, economic…
Kevin Chen
In “Poetry, Imagination, and the Messianic Witness of the Old Testament,” I discussed how our redeemed imagination can…
Trevor Laurence
1 Chronicles 22 and 28–29 narrate King David’s commissioning of Solomon to fulfill David’s hope and build…
Ian Paul
Hope is central to Christian understanding, and not simply because of St. Paul’s summary in 1 Cor 13…
Trevor Laurence
Jesus’ triumphal entry, with all of its redemptive-historical resonances, sets the stage for what ensues…
Michael J. Rhodes
Few texts in all of Scripture capture the imaginations and hearts of modern readers like Leviticus 25’s Year…
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