How atheists have made me a better Christian
Getting this question right is critical and, even though they don’t believe, some atheists acknowledge the weight of the issue and understand it’s worth exploring.

Getting this question right is critical and, even though they don’t believe, some atheists acknowledge the weight of the issue and understand it’s worth exploring.
We believe that the Bible Belt remains a steadfast harbinger of Good News in a culture that has become unimaginably unrecognizable by the traditional Western heritage of philosophy and theology.
Is there a correlation between reading the Scriptures and human flourishing?
I believe there are consequences for the growing cultural trends that seek to make God irrelevant while exploiting His common grace.
May we never lose sight of this important truth: “The battle we are fighting is on the spiritual level.”
It’s refreshing and encouraging to see Richard Dawkins ask a question like this, with this much apparent humility.
Pastor John MacArthur of Grace Community Church articulated a stern view of President Joe Biden’s leadership during a recent interview, framing it as a divine judgment and a reflection of societal moral decline. America is a nation reaping the consequences of its moral choices, he declared.
Think about these words — written long before school shootings became virtually commonplace. We can’t have the children reading, meditating on, venerating, and obeying commands like, “Thou shalt do no murder” or “Thou shalt not steal” or “Thou shalt not lie.”
As we navigate an era of unprecedented moral and ethical upheaval, a growing number of religious scholars and teachers of prophecy are sounding a clarion call.
A new poll reveals that while a majority of Americans support the practice of in-vitro fertilization, the public is split on the morality of destroying frozen embryos created in the process.