Don’t Add Fuel to Racism’s Fire
In the case of Trayvon Martin, we’d be better off to keep our heads cool and our words peaceable.
In the case of Trayvon Martin, we’d be better off to keep our heads cool and our words peaceable.
With the success of such movies as The Passion of the Christ, the gospel is touching people we Christians never expected to reach. God seems to be creating a “new pulpit” from which His Word will be preached.
I’m dreaming of a day when U.S. immigration policy reflects the values of the Bible.
Recently, a few hate-filled activists directed their bigotry against actor Kirk Cameron of Fireproof and TV’s Growing Pains. Kirk’s offense? He dared to say that God tries to protect us from self-destruction by warning us against such things as homosexuality and adultery and by declaring marriage to be a sacred union of one man and one woman.
I’ve been to more networking meetings than I can count. Sometimes I leave discouraged over what I see and hear: leaders with their own agendas whose lives don’t match the New Testament because they tolerate compromise. But a week ago my reaction at Converge21 in Virginia Beach, Va., was opposite. Instead, there were leaders who see the problems in the church and who are committed to getting the church back on track. Several hundred even signed a resolution articulating this commitment.
You might have to make a strategic move in order to fulfill God’s plan for your life.