Topics / God

Matching Results

Is church work more spiritual than any other work?
We're all for the afterlife but what are we supposed to do in the meantime? In the middle of too much, too fast, how are we supposed to pay attention to God?
Bernard Moon reflects on impatience, decisiveness and the unlikely business proposition of waiting on God.
Bernard Moon / Aug 28 2008
Articles
Jim Hancock is caught between Bernard Moon's question, "Can You Wait On God?" and Harvard Business School professor James Haskett who wants to know, "Why Don't Managers Think More Deeply?"
Jim Hancock / Sep 1 2008
Articles
The last in a series by Dan Wooldridge on Psalm 90. This considers Moses' final prayer and what he is requesting that will make life meaningful.
In Part 3 of this series, Dan Wooldridge explains the lessons that Moses passed on to a younger generation, that all of our days are numbered.
Dan Wooldridge unpacks the lessons of Moses to a new generation from his prayer in Psalm 90, lessons that provide wisdom for living and leading well.
An open letter from Jim Hancock and Rich Van Pelt in the wake of the murders at Virginia Tech.
Jim Hancock / Apr 21 2007
Articles
...bring back the awareness of a Whole and Higher Authority above us — and the altogether forgotten sense of humility before this entity. There can be only one true Progress: the sum total of the spiritual progress of each individual, of the degree of self–perfection in the course of their lives. Aleksandr Solzhenitysn

Buy this book from Amazon.com

The cross is the surest, truest and deepest window on the very heart and character of the living and loving God...the task of shaping our world is best understood as the redemptive task of bringing the achievement of the cross to bear on the world. N.T. Wright
In Part II, Dan Wooldridge introduces the perspective of Moses who exhorts a new generation to live wisely understanding that life is fragile and fleeting.
Dan Wooldridge reflects on 9/11 and what can give us real hope in the new normal.

Buy this book from Amazon.com

"The mechanical clock," as Lewis Mumford wrote, "made possible the idea of regular production, regular working hours and a standardized product." In short, without the clock, capitalism would have been quite impossible. The paradox, the surprise, and the wonder are that the clock was invented by men who wanted to devote themselves more rigorously to God; it ended as the technology of greatest use to men who wished to devote themselves to the accumulation of money.[...]" Neil Postman
You can have your Mancations with the boys and your Staycations knocking around the neighborhood. Bradley J. Moore took a Godcation, and more than met his match. Part Two
First there was the Mancation, where the guys would get away to blow off steam and escape the daily grind through classic male bonding. Next was the Staycation, where folks take spend vacation time discovering their own homes. Now Bradley J. Moore introduces the Godcation. And why not? Part One.