
Living in a Transitional Age
Living in a transitional age is scary: It’s falling apart, it’s unknowable, it doesn’t cohere, it doesn’t make sense, it’s all mystery again, and we can’t put order in it.
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Living in a transitional age is scary: It’s falling apart, it’s unknowable, it doesn’t cohere, it doesn’t make sense, it’s all mystery again, and we can’t put order in it.

Christ has been established by God to be our high priest. Learning the implications of that priesthood is a basic element of our Christian faith.

There’s a moral realism in healthy and grounded people. They’re not ideological, on the left or the right. They can accept people whom others have judged for one reason or another.

The Letter to the Hebrews encourages us to maintain our faithfulness by reminding us that we have an intercessor who knows us and understands us and pleads for us with the Father.

Stressed over the state of the country and our world? Forget the quick fixes. Take your pain to God.

God’s promise of rest is still in force for those who accept it in faith. Rest involves fulfillment that comes after effort has ended.

Whatever we hear, but also whatever we see, taste, touch, or smell, vibrates deep down with God’s song

God offers his help to we journeying Christians of today. And he expects us to respond to it today.

This week we hear about the first disciples who decided to follow Jesus.

God worked through the descendants of Abraham–not through angels–to bring about forgiveness for the sins of the people.