Who Should We Invite to Thanksgiving Dinner? …
Who you invite to share in your abundance shows where your treasure is.
Who you invite to share in your abundance shows where your treasure is.
If picnics don’t have to do with God, then we may as well close up shop.
If we really care about a person's ultimate welfare, we will confront them with their sin as well as comfort them in their trouble.
Knowing someone's name opens up the miracle of fellowship.
Too many people in the world steer clear of wheelchairs. Let it not be so with Christ's people.
Our homes and apartments should stand constantly ready for strategic hospitality—a readiness to welcome people who don't ordinarily live there.
Where the gospel flourishes people share their souls—their joys, guilts, fears, and passions.
We should aim at full doctrinal unity and full heart unity.
The cross undermines the deepest basis of disunity and lays a new foundation for unity.
This age is too evil for us to treat fellowship as a kind of comfortable togetherness that has no transforming, empowering, explosive effect.
Consider others—study them, know them, figure them out—to the end that you stimulate them to love and good deeds.
Christ’s promise to meet all of our needs is what frees us from fear and greed and enables us to joyfully share with others.
How can we live in a way that shows that the church is our family?
Loving Others Small Groups The Nature of the Church Church Membership