We become what we worship. Is that good news or bad news for us?
God can handle Himself. Isn't it good, though, that He wants to use us?
God keeps His promises. Even the ones we wish He wouldn't.
How does a faithful parent love their sinning children? Or, more broadly, how does a faithful Christian love a sinning family member? That is a question that we've been asked…
When we encounter something in the Bible, whether we're reading it or hearing it being faithfully preached, and we don't like what we hear for one reason or another, how do we respond?
As we think about our participation in the life of the church, do we think like priests in a holy temple whose priority is offering God acceptable worship, or do we think like consumers in a buffet line, coming in with the big fork to take the best for ourselves and leave the rest behind?
Hannah is more in awe of what God has given her than she is sad to give it up.
The cries of Hannah—"don't forget about me"—are fulfilled in the cries of the cross, where Jesus asked His father why He'd forsaken Him. And because Jesus tasted that pain for us, we can know, even in our worst pain, that we are not abandoned.
You will not be able to love like Ruth and Boaz until you really know how well you've been loved by the heir of Ruth and Boaz' great-grandson David.
Jesus is not just the true Boaz; He's the better Boaz because he didn't need anybody to suggest the idea of redeeming us to Him.
In the path of love, a resurrection follows every death. Watch as Ruth and Naomi begin to experience theirs.
How should we respond when God writes hard chapters into our stories?
