Discipleship involves more than just the gathering of knowledge.
N.T. Wright continues to explore important questions in Christian Origins and the Question of God series.
What role do discernment skills play in our efforts to successfully engage culture?
On seven stages in the journey of faith.
On the links between our spiritual and family trees.
What does it mean to have no fear in the flock of the Shepherd?
On listening as worship and as ministry.
A reflection on the questions and people that led a math and physics major to seminary.
A Food-a-Rac-a-Cycle for every church…or a new way that leads to old understanding?
An experience in a high school classroom prompts thoughts about the postmodern decline of shared cultural reference.
Preparing for the Christmas celebration during Advent by touching, visiting and living.
Considering ways of knowing in a season that calls us into our bodies.
Your opportunity to be a part of the conversation about the everyday implications of the Incarnation.
On seeking to address a sense of missing ingredients in inherited tradition.
On putting our money where our best stories are.
A few small reminders to learn and let go.
It wouldn't be the first time grace was entered the world as a newborn baby...
On understanding a creative reality through images.
On a tradition that binds what's past, even as it teaches for the future.
Decartes vs. Paul on certainty, deception and human flourishing in the real world.
How living in intentional community can lead to self-awareness.
A childhood of gathering evidence gives way to an adulthood of storytelling.
A reflection on religious identity and the freedom of commitment.
A vision for redesigning college as education for whole people.
A call away from snobbery and gluttony toward the ultimate feast.
Reflecting on the ways books demand our lives.
On paying attention to what we consume, and how we consume.
A tribute to Mr. Closz, and to all of the students who ponder the great mysteries of life.
On learning the language of the land.
Considering created things and the names of those who made them.