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Ten Questions with: Reinhold Titus

Ten Questions with: Reinhold Titus

1. How did you become a Christian?

I was born into and raised in a nominal Christian home. While attending university, I attended a camp organised by an interdenominational youth organisation. The Lord revealed Himself to me through His Word and Spirit. However, it took me a few days of pondering on the decision and implications of committing my life to Him. I did so one afternoon while in my room, being convicted of His love, sacrifice and my need to know and walk with Him.

2. What lessons have you learnt since that you would want to pass on to a younger Christian version of yourself?

I don’t know if I would do anything any differently. I made mistakes, but that was part of the growth process. I was privileged having people alongside me who took discipleship and mentoring seriously and did it with me when I came to faith. That included the awareness that faith was not only a personal matter but communal and expressed in acts of service.

Olympics then and now: What can Eric Liddell teach us today?

Olympics then and now: What can Eric Liddell teach us today?

Luke Randall
Luke Randall
Date posted: 1 Jul 2024

The Olympic Games are almost upon us. They start in Paris on 26 July and countless storylines will inevitably surround what is arguably the world’s biggest sporting event.

Can Novak Djokovic finally claim the gold medal, the one accolade which has eluded him during his glittering career, in what is surely his last realistic chance to win it? Can Tom Daley win a fifth Olympic medal? Can Simone Biles become the most decorated American gymnast in Olympic history? These are just some of the headlines which will fill papers around the globe as the games draw near.

How to live in a ‘negative world’

How to live in a ‘negative world’

Kenneth Brownell
Date posted: 1 May 2024

Aaron Renn is one of the most perceptive commentators on American evangelicalism as well as the broader culture.

A few years ago, he turned an online post into an article for First Things, an influential American journal on Christian public engagement, in which he described what he called the three worlds of evangelicalism. It became one of the most read and talked-about articles in the Christian world and even the secular media in the United States. He has now turned the article into a book.

Social media and our children

Social media and our children

Glynn Harrison
Date posted: 1 Jun 2024

If you missed all the headlines about the link between smartphones and the epidemic of mental illness in children and young people, then you have not been paying sufficient attention to your social media feed.

The demand for young people’s mental health services currently stands at record levels. It began around 2012, which saw a sharp uptick in rates of childhood anxiety, depression and self-harm. And since then, the graphs have continued their upward march. Even sceptical mental health epidemiologists like me, who prefer to look at data from several different sources before making up their minds, now believe that something serious is happening to our children.

What shapes your faith? The Trinity?

What shapes your faith? The Trinity?

Michael Reeves
Michael Reeves
Date posted: 1 Apr 2024

‘God is love’ (1 John 4:8). Those three words could hardly be more bouncy.

They seem lively, lovely, and as warming as a crackling fire. But ‘God is Trinity’? No, hardly the same effect: that just sounds cold and stodgy. All quite understandable, but Christians must see the reality behind what can be off-putting language. Yes, the Trinity can be presented as a fusty and irrelevant dogma, but the truth is that God is love because God is a Trinity.

What made Jesus tick? What does it show?

What made Jesus tick? What does it show?

Andrew Nicholls
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

Have you ever watched someone be far, far more loving than you, and wondered how they do it?

I can think of a lady who, in caring for her husband with worsening dementia, showed endless patience, day after day, hour after hour, minute after minute, helping him with the same ordinary little things, over and over and over again. I never saw her cross, or even a little irritated at her husband for his inability to do the simplest things or to remember anything from one minute to the next. I often wondered how I would be in a similar situation, and I’m pretty sure I would soon be irritated. Her beautiful character was a mystery to me – how did she do it? What made her tick so much better than me?

Ten Questions: Obedience and tribalism

Ten Questions: Obedience and tribalism

William Wilson

1. How did you become a Christian?

Move over Equality, Equity is the new kid in town: Here’s what it means

Move over Equality, Equity is the new kid in town: Here’s what it means

Tom Underhill
Date posted: 1 May 2024

Over the past few years, corporate HR departments and public bodies have quietly been wielding their Tipp-Ex in a bulk deletion of the letters ‘a’ and ‘l’. ‘Equality’ has been changed to ‘equity’ in a mass rebranding of EDI (Equity, Diversity and Inclusion) departments and initiatives.

Or maybe it wasn’t quiet: perhaps in your experience it was heralded with great fanfare. Either way, this deletion represents a significant extension of the EDI mission, now almost synonymous with the one term, Equity. So what is Equity, what does this change imply, and how should we think Christianly about these matters?

What is the value of running intensive  preaching training weeks cross-culturally?

What is the value of running intensive preaching training weeks cross-culturally?

Neil Watkinson
Date posted: 1 May 2024

Having been involved in short intensive weeks of preaching training for pastor-preachers and Bible teachers in Africa and Asia for the last 17 years – six of them based in SE Asia with Crosslinks – it’s been good to reflect on the question: ‘Of what value are these – do they not simply run the risk of cultural imperialism, even in preaching style?’

Local churches across the globe are growing without us, as Christ is proclaimed and the gospel bears fruit. So why do such Bible teaching and preaching training?

Ten Questions: Addressing your own heart

Ten Questions: Addressing your own heart

Carl Chambers

1. How did you become a Christian?

Ten Questions: Is our gospel ‘too safe’?

Ten Questions: Is our gospel ‘too safe’?

Paul Woolley

1. How did you become a Christian?

Contagious holiness in contentious  settings? Making holy the unholy

Contagious holiness in contentious settings? Making holy the unholy

Craig Blomberg
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

In the ancient Middle East, people took hospitality more seriously than most of us, and were more guarded with whom they ate. Most cultures had dietary restrictions and taboos. In some instances, eating the wrong food could render a person ritually unclean.

But whereas the Pharisees avoided contact with ‘sinners’ so that they would not become ritually unclean, Jesus befriended sinners – because He believed that His holiness was contagious.

Are you ‘two-kingdoms’ or ‘transformationist’?

Are you ‘two-kingdoms’ or ‘transformationist’?

Al Gibbs
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

One of the perennial questions that Christians ask is how the church should engage with society.

The Bible is clear that individual Christians should share God’s love with everyone in the contexts that God has placed them, but to what extent should the church, as the church, seek to influence society? There are several ways of addressing this question, but in recent years many evangelicals have gravitated to one of two paradigms – either a two-kingdoms model, or a transformationist model. These models or views can get complicated, but it’s useful for Christians to have a basic sense of the strengths and weaknesses of each, as well as being aware of the history.

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