Why (most) American evangelicals should now support homosexuality

Let me cut to the chase:  I’ve now become convinced that a good portion of American evangelicals should no longer oppose homosexuality. That is, most evangelicals, if they are to be consistent, should have the same ethical expectations of homosexual relationships that they usually do of heterosexual relationships. Two things have led me to this conviction:  first, […]

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What were you made for?

It’s not often that a professor can make a roomful of undergrads explode in laughter–and at the same time engage them in some serious soul-searching. Addressing a crowd of Harvard undergrads, Stanford Business Professor Charles Lee spoke about what every Harvard grad wants:  success. At one point he keenly observed:

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Good Friday we know, but Holy Saturday–what’s that?

In the last book of the Bible, called Revelation, in the fifth chapter, John takes a selfie. As the title Revelation implies, the book claims to describe what was revealed by/about Jesus to John, “who testifies to everything he saw” (1.2).  Accordingly, John uses the phrase “(Then) I saw” (or “I looked”) well over forty times, while inviting his reader to “Behold!” (or “Look!”) around […]

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Can a woman teach in church?

It should come as no surprise that some of the best teachers I know are women. In fact, in terms of pure communication ability, I’ve wondered on more than a few occasions if women (on average) surpass men. Of the churches I know, most all of them have women doing some sort of teaching–e.g., teaching children (in Sunday school […]

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Inequality: a key to flourishing Christian community

More than 175 years ago the French aristocrat Alexis de Tocqueville published his two-volume work Democracy in America.  Based on his nine-month visit to the States in 1831, it offers lively and incredibly penetrating reflections on political theory and the American cultural landscape. Still highly regarded today, Democracy in America continues to astonish modern readers by its […]

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