Three parables: Finding and gathering (July 30, 2023)
What if we viewed the three parables in Matthew 13:44-52 through the eyes of a child, Mark Hinds wonders?
What if we viewed the three parables in Matthew 13:44-52 through the eyes of a child, Mark Hinds wonders?
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
A Presbyterian minister and scholar is working to shift the cultural paradigm that abortion is sin.
"Davignon offers a blanket critique … (h)e views the modern world so negatively that he even critiques congregations that utilize secular tools such as social media to promote their ministries." — Jo Wiersema
You asked — we listened! We're adding a supplement to Changing the World: Confirmation for the Missional Church: "A Handbook for Parents and Mentors.”
Rosalind Banbury previews the next Horizons Bible study offered by the Presbyterian Women.
Andrew Taylor-Troutman shares how an hourly break at his community pool gives his family a glimpse of sabbath.
Did King Saul have PTSD, Elana Keppel Levy wonders? Perhaps. What she knows from her own life is this: surviving is an act of courage.
Colin Farmer reviews the documentary short "All I See is the Future" — recommending it to churches who want to engage topics like grace, redemption and mass incarceration.
Here's what some readers are saying in response to our #EndGunViolence special issue released in June. Add your voice to the conversation!
Brian R. Louis, a pastor in southern Arizona, shares the hate and love he experienced at a recent Pride parade.
Worship professor Will Bishop said that focusing on the most popular worship songs can miss what churches are actually singing.
Sober Spirituality is well-written, easy to follow and clearly organized, but it isn't for everyone, writes Susan Graceson.
Looking for a new non-fiction read? Amy Pagliarella has you covered.
Ashley Mason Brown offers concrete ideas for how faith leaders can assist with lowering the rate of gun violence in the United States.
The innovation lab is designed to help ‘rebuild the neighborhood’ as envisioned by the seminary’s celebrated alum, Fred Rogers.
For the most part, humans can tell the difference between good and evil. And yet, the definition can get messy. What's a seed to do? Mark Hinds looks at the parable of the weeds.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
In this lesson, children will explore this psalm noticing God’s incredibly close relationship with humanity. Then, they will consider how being known by a loving, gracious God blesses us.
Looking at the parable of the weeds in Matthew, Teri McDowell Ott discerns two calls for those who read the text.
Presbyterian Disaster Assistance has been responding to the "human-caused disaster" of gun violence for 24 years.
Amy Pagliarella recommends some of the latest memoirs.
Responding to the Southern Baptist Convention's actions to bar female pastoral leadership, biblical scholar Frances Taylor Gench reflects on how the PC(USA) engages Scripture that instructs women to be subservient such as 1 Timothy 2.
There are whispers of a "Ted Lasso" spin-off, but Brendan McLean doesn't want one. Applying the hospice principle of a good death to a beloved story can lead to something profound, he writes.
The school in Spokane, Washington, joins a sliver of Christian colleges and universities that have bucked a largely sturdy resistance to hiring married gay faculty.