god

  • If the apostles walked into most modern churches this Sunday, they wouldn’t recognize much. Not the architecture, not the schedule, not the sermons. Maybe not even the gospel. They’d recognize the name of Jesus—but they’d wonder who all these well-dressed spectators were, why no one was breaking bread together, and why half the congregation thinks

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  • Precepts and presuppositions—few things weigh heavier on the conscience of anyone who tries to read honestly. We all have them; it’s nearly impossible to be human and not. Every experience, sermon, or inherited belief becomes a lens we don’t realize we’re wearing. Yet when reading most literature, we at least try to set those lenses

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  • The deeper you study theology, the harder it gets to keep simple faith. Not because truth destroys belief, but because it refuses to play by its rules. Every serious student of Scripture eventually reaches that moment—the slow, quiet crisis where the text stops cooperating with Sunday’s assumptions. Manuscripts disagree. Traditions diverge. Doctrines shift depending on

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  • For the last few decades—let’s be honest, since the Reagan years—whole industries have been built on vanishing pilots, abandoned pets, and conveniently folded clothes. “The Rapture” has become the modern Church’s favorite escape hatch. The only problem: Scripture doesn’t actually teach it. And if it did, you might not want a ticket. The Word That

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  • In 2017, Dr. Bart Ehrman published a short but revealing post titled “How Do We Know What Most Scholars Think?” It’s one of those pieces that sounds simple on the surface—“what’s the majority view?”—but touches the heart of how truth and authority work in biblical scholarship. Eight years later, his argument still echoes across classrooms

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  • The Comfort of Certainty Acts 21 is one of those stories we think we already know. The sermon practically writes itself: Paul, warned of danger, presses on in faith; the hero obeys, the crowd weeps, and God’s will marches on. But the text itself isn’t that tidy. If you read without the stained-glass glow, Luke’s

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  • Philippians 2:5-11 and Colossians 1:13-20 are two of the most explosive passages in the New Testament. They read like poetry, and for over a century scholars have labeled them “early Christian hymns.” Open a Nestle-Aland Greek New Testament and you’ll even see them set out in stanzas. But here’s the live question: were these lines

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