Grace, Healing, and Unity in the Breaking of Bread
Perhaps the greatest temptation for emerging Methodism will be to react rather than to rebuild.
Perhaps the greatest temptation for emerging Methodism will be to react rather than to rebuild.
In this video, Joshua McNall explains how the doctrine of atonement reveals the depth of our human predicament.
In this video, Josh McNall introduces the topic and begins to outline several questions that emerge as we grapple with the significance of the good news of Jesus.
The more aware we are of God’s unconditional, eternal love for us, the more we will love God back.
Pride, which causes a person to believe he or she does not need God, is the very root of the fall.
With the knowledge of this love firmly in place, we can avoid slipping into the favor-earning pattern so typical of many relationships.
If the desire of God for the spiritual life of the believer is a deeper and deeper level of trust, this can only be accomplished through a deeper and deeper level of growth.
The greater the expectations for the relationship, the greater the potential of a dry season, and the greater the possible consequences.
The environment for this spiritual formation may include solitude, but its primary proving ground will be in community.
To follow Jesus is to be called to live in courageous faith.
The way God lovingly disrupted David’s degeneration is hope-inducing for slumping disciples.