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Joshua HeavinFeaturedChurchEvangelicalismFormation
In recent years it has become increasingly popular for churches of differing sizes, locations, and denominational traditions to make use of consultant services to find new ministers and staff for Christian institutions. If you browse the denominational job boards of […]
Stiven PeterEvangelicalismCulture WarBook Reviews
The Great Dechurching isn't primarily driven by the culture war. It's driven by the radical absence of the church in the day to day lives of people.
Brad EastFeaturedEvangelicalismCurrent Politics
Christendom is the name we give to Christian civilization, when society, culture, law, art, family, politics, and worship are saturated by the church’s influence and informed by its authority. Christendom traces its beginnings to the fourth century after Christ; it […]
Jake MeadorFeaturedEvangelicalism
The Road goes ever on and on Out from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone, Let others follow it who can! Let them a journey new begin, But I at last with weary feet […]
Jake MeadorEvangelicalismCurrent Politics
The religious right is well and truly dead. So what comes next?
Jake MeadorEvangelicalism
The right exvangelicals are both an echo and a mirror of the older left exvangelicals.
Jake MeadorEvangelicalism
The reformed charismatic church planting network Acts 29 serves as a model for the evangelical fracturing and can offer us many valuable lessons.
Jake MeadorChurchEvangelicalism
If the American church is to take advantage of the opportunities in front of us we will need to shift our ways of thinking about several key issues.
Jake MeadorEvangelicalismCurrent Politics
The Doug election is a fascinating reset of America's socio-political context and offers exciting possibilities to politically marginal evangelicals.
Jake MeadorEvangelicalism
Sometimes history suggests certain critiques to us which, on further inspection, are actually contrived and simplistic, concealing more than they reveal.
Jake MeadorEvangelicalism
Most Americans now live in what Paul Kingsnorth has called 'the void.' While devastatingly sad, it also suggests a wonderful opportunity for the church.
Jake MeadorEvangelicalism
When a sociological evangelicalism is the norm, it quickly leads to clericalism and a distended, twisted vision of Christian common life.