The Incarnation Is More than the Manger
How an ancient African bishop championed the Incarnation’s redemptive arc.
The Chinese Evangelicals Turning to Orthodoxy
More believers from China and Taiwan are finding Eastern Christianity appealing. I sought to uncover why.
Even Our Corpses Belong to Christ
The Son did not forsake his body in the grave, and he won’t forsake ours either.
The Bible’s Development Is a Messy Story, but It Can Bolster Our Faith
If anything, the historical details are even messier than Susan Lim’s new account allows.
Come Thou Long Expected Judgment
Advent prepares us for the Incarnation, but also for the gift of God’s final justice.
Sometimes, God’s Provision Is Prozac
My battle with postpartum anxiety challenged the limits I’d placed on how God can heal us.
Evangelical Thinking on the Trinity Is Often Remarkably Revisionist
Theologian Matthew Barrett diagnoses our drift away from an orthodox understanding of Father, Son, and Spirit.
Twentieth-Century Theology Lost Sight of Something Essential about the Trinity
It’s time to recover the teaching that Father, Son, and Spirit act as one, with no “division of labor” between them.
What the Crucifixion and Resurrection Mean for Our Physical Healing
Spiritually these deeds save us. But do mend our earthly bodies as well?
The Church Mothers Teach Us to Delight in Scripture
Monica and Macrina didn’t just influence Augustine and Gregory of Nyssa. They were biblical interpreters in their own right.