Loading...
Loading...
4,558 results found
Fanny Crosby lost her sight at six weeks old due to a doctor's mistake. She could have spent her life in bitterness.
Amy Carmichael served in India for 55 years—without a single furlough. She rescued children from temple prostitution, faced constant opposition, suffered a crippling injury at 64, and spent her final 20 years bedridden. Yet she kept writing, kept praying, kept leading her mission.
“Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). This divine invitation echoes through the ages, inviting us into a space of profound transformation where our chaotic lives can meet the eternal truth of God's sovereignty. The Hebrew term...
When a Western missionary first arrived in rural India, everything seemed backward—the pace, the values, the social patterns. Her mind, shaped by American culture, kept judging.
Isaiah 40:31 reminds us, "But those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint." This powerful promise reveals...
In 1727, the Moravian community at Herrnhut began a prayer meeting that continued 24/7 for over 100 years. From that prayer came missionaries—the first Protestant missionaries to slaves in the Caribbean, to Greenland, to Africa.
Corrie ten Boom and her sister Betsie were imprisoned in Ravensbruck concentration camp for hiding Jews. Their barracks was infested with fleas—miserable, biting, constant. Betsie insisted they thank God for everything, including the fleas. Corrie thought she was crazy.
Isaiah 40:31 tells us, "But those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint." This passage speaks profoundly...
Orthodox icon writers don't "paint" icons; they "write" them—a theological act requiring prayer and fasting. One iconographer spent weeks on an image of Christ, praying before each brushstroke.
John Wesley was a radical experimenter in holiness. He tried rising at 4 AM, fasting twice weekly, giving away most of his income—all testing how completely he could offer his body. "Present your bodies as a living sacrifice." Wesley took...
William Carey was a poor cobbler in 18th-century England who hung a hand-drawn map of the world above his workbench. While repairing shoes, he prayed over nations that had never heard the gospel. When he proposed missions to India, church...
When the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was drafted in 1948, Eleanor Roosevelt insisted on the word "universal"—not just rights for some nations, but for every human being. Critics said it was too broad, too idealistic. She replied that dignity...
Lottie Moon served as a missionary in China for nearly 40 years. When famine struck, she gave away her food until she herself was starving. She weighed 50 pounds when she died on Christmas Eve 1912, having given everything. Her...
For nearly 2,000 years, the Jewish people were scattered across the earth—persecuted, exiled, nearly exterminated. Yet in 1948, Israel was reborn as a nation, fulfilling prophecies spoken millennia earlier. The scattering that seemed like divine abandonment became preservation; the suffering became testimony to God's faithfulness.
On March 24, 1980, Archbishop Oscar Romero celebrated Mass in a hospital chapel in El Salvador. His sermon that evening reflected on John 3:16—God's love poured out in self-giving.
The Anglican Book of Common Prayer opens communion with: "We do not presume to come to this your Table, O merciful Lord, trusting in our own righteousness, but in your manifold and great mercies." It's Ephesians 2:8-9 in liturgical form.
Fannie Lou Hamer was beaten, shot at, and impoverished for registering Black voters in Mississippi. When asked why she kept going, she said, "I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired"—and kept working anyway. Her strength wasn't physical; it came from somewhere beyond herself.
A wealthy man died, leaving his estate to his lazy nephew. The nephew had done nothing to deserve it—hadn't worked for his uncle, hadn't visited him, hadn't earned a penny of it. The inheritance was pure gift. Some thought it...
Monica prayed and wept for her son Augustine for years—he was brilliant but dissolute, running from God. She once asked a bishop for help; he replied, "The son of so many tears cannot be lost." He was right. Augustine's very wanderings shaped his unique insight.
Eric Liddell won Olympic gold in 1924, made famous in "Chariots of Fire." But his greater race came later. As a missionary in China during WWII, he was interned in a Japanese camp. With meager resources, he organized games for...
In Auschwitz, when a prisoner escaped, the Nazis selected ten men to die by starvation as punishment. One chosen man cried out for his wife and children. Father Maximilian Kolbe stepped forward: "I am a Catholic priest.
As we gather in this sacred space, let us reflect on the profound intersection of *The Peculiar Politics of Christ* and our progressive Christian faith, especially in light of Romans 8:19-22. The Apostle Paul paints a vivid picture of creation...
Dispensationalists note: the Spirit's permanent indwelling is a distinctive of the church age. Old Testament believers experienced the Spirit differently; the Spirit came "upon" them for specific tasks. Since Pentecost, the Spirit indwells all believers, producing fruit from within. This is our dispensation's privilege—and responsibility.
Evangelist Reinhard Bonnke held crusades across Africa for decades. His organization estimates 79 million people recorded decisions for Christ. Critics questioned the numbers; Bonnke just kept preaching. He believed the Great Commission was meant to be fulfilled with power: healings, deliverances, miracles drawing crowds.