On the Possibility of Saying “I Love You, But I Don’t Like You” …
The Opinion, v10 n2, pp. 5-7
The command to love is a call to the deepest and most thoroughgoing sanctification.
The command to love is a call to the deepest and most thoroughgoing sanctification.
When a person strikes rock bottom with a sense of helplessness he may find that he has struck the Rock of Ages.
How can I admit that I am a worm and yet “love my neighbor as myself”?
Something tremendous is at stake in the practical unity of love in the body of Christ.
Even inside perfection, there is good, better, and best. And understanding this will help us love as we ought.
God is wakening people to the astonishing reality that they can be different and better in the way they love others.
Should the sins of others keep us captive in a prison of sorrow?
The law is not our primary means for bearing fruit. It serves mostly to teach us that we don't bear fruit apart from the gospel.
Thoughts on mercy and justice in 2 Thessalonians 3:6-15.
Paul isn't abstractly defining love 1 Corinthians 13. He is showing how it applies to the church.
How to interact with those who are struggling in their faith.
Thoughts on Bethlehem Baptist's new relational commitments.
Six biblical guidelines for loving each other.
Fellowship & Hospitality Forgiving Others Social Issues