Global Collaboration: The Birth of World Christianity
The first World Missionary Conference marked the beginning of a unique era in global Christianity.
The first World Missionary Conference marked the beginning of a unique era in global Christianity.
A proper theology of the body embraces the sacredness and sanctity of all our embodied existence and sees the eternal significance in each day.
The body celebrates that our physical bodies serve a redemptive purpose. They are the means through which God conveys his grace.
Let our voices, whether it be in a song of worship or when we are talking with our coworkers or friends, be voices that always give glory to God.
All of our worship is anticipating that even greater chorus that the apostle John sees in the book of Revelation.
The mountains provide a great reminder of the presence of God, because God met his people on the mountains.
The character of God is reflected in the lives of the righteous who love him.
Fearing God is not to be confused with being afraid of God because he is viewed as capricious, cruel, or unpredictable.
Psalm 104 leaves us breathless at the array of images and the extent of God’s care and provision.
The incarnation is theologically linked to the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ, which is connected to our own bodily resurrection.
A Christian theology of the body points to a tremendous, positive view of the material body.
We need more than a tepid, easy-to-swallow, so-called gospel that is void of power, holiness, and transformation. We want a rebirth of New Testament Christianity.