Guilt, pain, and failure are three of the most difficult experiences in our spiritual lives
Nothing beats the adrenaline rush of being motivated to make a change, but how do you make that change last?
In the Parable of the Two Sons, Jesus tells a story to help us learn why we should say what we really think.
God gives Jonah a second chance.
Have you ever felt like you were stuck in a dark and completely unfamiliar place?
Put yourself in the shoes of the prophet Jonah in our new storytelling series.
We are living in a time of deep need for our own version of a Public Theologian, but with a more spiritual emphasis. I call these new 21st century thinkers Spiritual Theologians.
For all of us who face the limits of yesterday’s memories, we can learn from Nehemiah’s example and renew our dedication to God by practicing “Radical Forgetfulness.”
God wants us to experience continual restarts, rebirths, redefinitions, and to rebrand our lives.
When reading Scripture, there is no shortage of profound spiritual mystery, interaction, and activity. So why is Christianity seen as more organizational than spiritual?
There are many benefits of hard work in the Bible. Our capacity to grow can only be sustained if we understand the spirituality of hard work.
“Deep Change” is a dynamic and transformational experience of God. The result reaches deeper than superficial improvement. We become a different person.