The author of Hebrews expresses the trustworthiness and finality of God’s promises to us in three simple words: “He has said.” Pandemic or no pandemic, we can take that to the bank, as the great Charles Spurgeon reminds us.
Across three millennia, the Psalms have been the ever-timely prayer book of God’s people. Here’s Psalm 103 read aloud as a dialogue between the psalmist and the faithful, a mighty weapon against the pandemic.
The most potent ammunition we could wish for as Covid fighters is in Psalms, the ancient prayer book of God’s people. Here’s an example from Psalm 27, “The Lord is my light and my salvation.“
When I learned in midlife of Jesus’ final victory over sin and death, the world and the devil, through his atoning sacrifice on Calvary, it rescued me from the treadmill of self-salvation I had been raised on.
When his teenage son asked contributor Mark Shepard about human suffering and the age-old problem of evil, it set off a family theological discussion with no end in sight
I never met the great evangelist, but we interacted a couple of times in my editorial role, and he was a link in the chain of my coming to know Jesus as Savior and Lord.
When Nixon henchman Chuck Colson came to Christ at a moment of political and personal crisis in 1973, little did I dream what it would mean for my own spiritual journey.