Reading Time: 3 minutes
What inspires heroic actions? . . . If there is no God, and survival of the fittest is nature’s rule, why would anyone jeopardize their own safety to save someone else? . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
What inspires heroic actions? . . . If there is no God, and survival of the fittest is nature’s rule, why would anyone jeopardize their own safety to save someone else? . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
There is much for us to learn in the book of Esther. One practical application we find in the first part of Esther’s story is this: with recognition comes responsibility. . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
First Thessalonians 5:17 says, “Pray continually.” David Faust writes: “What do you do ‘continually’ in a typical day? Check your e-mail? Look at your cell phone? Grab another cup of coffee? Do you worry continually? If a Fitbit could track your walk with God, what would it record?” . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
If you “see the handwriting on the wall,” it’s a warning that something difficult, dangerous, or unpleasant will happen soon. . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
The future looked grim for Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, but they never flinched in their devotion to God. . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
“Preachers and seminary professors have a lot to teach us, but so do new believers and little kids,” David Faust writes. “And so do atheists and doubters whose questions make us dig deeper into the Scriptures and think harder about what we believe. . . .”
Reading Time: 3 minutes
“If he were around today, the prophet Daniel would be a natural choice for a graduation speaker,” David Faust writes. “According to Daniel 1, he was intelligent and good looking, filled with leadership potential. Here are some points I think Daniel might have emphasized in a speech to young adults. . . .”
Reading Time: 3 minutes
Obviously, Jesus’ followers should be generous. But the Lord advocated a level of commitment and sacrifice that goes far beyond token giving. . . .
Reading Time: 3 minutes
Nature’s beauty points to God’s “eternal power and divine nature” (Romans 1:20). . . . Yet, ever since the Garden of Eden, the Creator has stamped these natural wonders with a solemn label: “Temporary.” . . .