Author: Tim Challies

A La Carte (January 12)

A La Carte: Gospel hope for America’s largest unreached people group / Where are the peaceable presbyters? / How IVF made its way into evangelical pro-life debates / “Steadfast Love” / Stop looking for friends and start making them / Let us become like little children / and more.See AlsoA La Carte (1/25)A La Carte (1/2)A La Carte (3/30)

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A La Carte (January 11)

A La Carte: John Piper’s five fears of old age / I changed my mind about social media / How an old man helped save my faith / Foreign territory / How holy are you? / and more.See AlsoA La Carte (August 15)A La Carte (November 9)A La Carte (October 7)

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I Feel At Home in Your Church

It is one of the realities of the Christian faith that skeptics love to criticize—the reality that there are a host of different denominations and a multitude of different expressions of Christian worship. But while believers have become accustomed to responding to this criticism with a sense of shame, I choose to see it in a different light. I choose to see each tradition as highlighting different aspects of God’s purpose for the local church. As a prism refracts the light and separates it into its component colors, the differing traditions refract the Bible’s varying commands and emphases. And this is why I feel at home in so many different churches. I feel at home in a Brethren church. I feel at home because of its commitment to simplicity in worship and to the necessity of celebrating the Lord’s Supper on a weekly basis. Such churches are meek and humble and committed to honoring the Lord in ways that may be unflashy but are faithful to the Scriptures. They look with longing and pleading for the return of Jesus Christ. I always count it a joy to break bread with the Brethren. I feel at home in an Anglican church. It feels familiar because its worship is so thoroughly steeped in Word and prayer. While there is always a sermon (though probably one shorter than I am accustomed to) and while there is always song (though often fewer than I am accustomed to) the service is structured around reading the Word and both corporate and…See AlsoOn WorshipShould We Light Candles? (Part 2)Book Review – Perimeters of Light: Biblical Boundaries for the Emerging Church

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A La Carte (January 10)

A La Carte: The Bible is too inexhaustibly interesting to be boring / The wedding promises I would have made / Prayer for my heart this election year / Who was the real Muhammad? / Is Sunday still the first day of the week? / Jesus said NOTHING about homosexuality / and more.See AlsoA La Carte (October 24)A La Carte (September 24)A La Carte (January 16)

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A La Carte (January 9)

A La Carte: Staying sane in an election year / We need leaders calling the church to faithfulness out of love, not resentment disguised as courage / Marriage as a covenant / Looking for God in all the wrong places / and more.See AlsoA La Carte (May 26)A La Carte (August 20)A La Carte (1/14)

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