The Christian Way Is the Way of Repentance
The way of repentance leads to the fullness of life in Christ, even to entire sanctification.
The way of repentance leads to the fullness of life in Christ, even to entire sanctification.
God doesn’t only want us to be good. He doesn’t only want us to do great things. He wants to give us deep faith so we can go far.
Miriam Swaffield introduces us to biblical holiness as God’s gift and invitation to carry his transforming presence with us everywhere in the world.
Prevenient grace is the work of God’s Spirit on human hearts to loosen sin’s natural grip on us.
For nearly two hundred years, John Bunyan’s iconic title The Pilgrim’s Progress was a staple part of the fabric of Methodism.
What happens to faith when it becomes too dogmatic? What about the kind that slides into perpetual doubt? In this video, Josh McNall recommends we adopt a model of faith that lives somewhere in-between.
Some churches focus on evangelism at the expense of discipleship by seeking to win converts instead of making disciples.
We need people in our lives to journey with us in order that we may “watch over one another in love” between our Sundays and other times of worship.
John Wesley often said that he instituted bands among the people called Methodist in order to create a setting where James 5:16 could be practiced and lived out.
The rapid growth of Methodism would not have been possible without the sacrifices and dedication of the early Wesleyan leaders.
These six marks provide a genetic structure—much like the DNA in a living organism—mutually working together to create the movement dynamics that led to the Wesleyan revival.
God does not ask us to do what he himself has not already done. God has given us the resources to love.