The Gospel According to Jeffrey Dahmer
Grace is incomprehensibly comforting yet incomparably devastating. Grace kills the human made economy of performance and merit.
Grace is incomprehensibly comforting yet incomparably devastating. Grace kills the human made economy of performance and merit.
The breadth of our ability to imagine what God can do depends on the depth of our capacity to remember what God has done.
God’s chief desire is willful obedience inspired by holy love yet his will cannot be thwarted even by total insurrection and the most heinous rebellion.
Our great need is not for a doctrine of eternal security but the graciously granted gift of divine assurance which comes from the Holy Spirit.
Hearing from the Holy Spirit is not reserved for a special class of Christians. It really should be an every day experience for every follower of Jesus.
Theologically trained, sanctified, Spirit-filled—this is the sacred ambition of the Word of God.
Apostolic activity is in the job description of every baptized believer in Jesus Christ.
Only the Holy Spirit can take the tragedy of persecution and turn it into the triumph of the gospel’s proclamation.
Today’s Christians and churches don’t need more innovation or better programs or bigger buildings or newer worship songs as much as we need a constantly deepening confidence in the power of the gospel.
A martyr in death serves as powerful encouragement to the living to be a martyr in life.
Worship of the true and living God happens when we vulnerably trust in the certainty of God for the unpredictability of the future.
Faith means raising our level of expectation of the possibilities that hover just above and beneath the surface of everything, every person, everywhere, all the time.