I've been reading quite a few
blogs about church planting.
This particular instance feels similar to many of the other great «Christian Controversies» of the past 15 years — Rob Bell with Love Wins, John McCarthur with his comments on the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, Don Miller's
blog about church.
About Blog A
blog about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints.
About Blog A
blog about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints.
About Blog A
blog about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints.
About Blog A
blog about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints.
Not exact matches
According to Jeffrey Augustine, author of the
blog The Scientology Money Project, the
church has a book value of $ 1.75 billion,
about $ 1.5 billion of which is tied up in real estate, mostly at its headquarters in Clearwater and in Hollywood, Calif..
But — caution is wise: Be careful a
blog does not become a theraputic enviroment for one to say what they want to say
about the
church — even God — Jesus or whatever.
** After this article was posted, an Episcopalian noted that the
church's COO, Bishop Stacey Sauls, had a written a
blog post
about the verdict on July 15.
Steve and Josh are ex-pastors who
blog about the stupidity of
church life that they don't miss.
David Dunham writes a
blog for RELEVANT
about how the
Church confuses maturity with masculinity and why that has damaged church me
Church confuses maturity with masculinity and why that has damaged
church me
church members.
Sarah, I think maybe you have not read many posts on my
blog, and have jumped to conclusions
about how I view
church and
church - going Christians.
A reader of my
blog sent in a question
about the fear and pain he feels after he left his
church.
Musicleading.com A
blog about life lessons learned from a music teacher /
church worship coordinator.
At no point in
church history have so many people written so many books and articles, not to mention
blogs, wikis, and e-newsletters,
about the Christian faith.
Check out this article on my
church's
blog about college ministry.
Dianna Anderson writes a
blog for RELEVANT
about how Jesus and Scripture embraced feminism — and why the
Church should to.
It has been announced that Steve Chalke's
church will offer same sex marriages (click here to read a
blog by Steve Chalke
about his decision)....
Ben Simpson writes a
blog for RELEVANT
about how to remain with a
church, even when you do not see eye to eye.
There are a few
churches doing this around the country, but I only read
about them in books, and on
blogs, and have never actually visited one or seen how it works.
She commented on his now deleted old
blog... flirty
about the «sassy new friends I met in Dallas at Journey
church.»
I checked out your
blog and was encouraged by your post
about looking for a
church to serve in rather than a
church that will feed you.
This
blog is all
about critiquing religion and the
church.
I wrote a
blog post
about how no
church would ever sing «Deborah's Song» because it is so sexually suggestive.
Kenyon Adams writes a
blog for RELEVANT
about how the
church can play a role in nourishing Christian artists called to major cities.
Even as the situation in Ferguson seems to be improving, the events this week prompted me and many of the writers contributing to this
blog series
about racial reconciliation in the
church to reflect upon the role Christians could play in these types of events in the future.
Any way say, Man of God respectable Terry Jones, of Florida's Dove's
Church, maybe a day would come that the world and Muslims would thank you for your causing all these discussions to come out today's on this site
blogs and many other sites
blogs and to it leading to have more people religious discussions leading them read and learn more
about Islam and the Quran many who's eyes had opened to reality converted to Islam or at least respect Muslims and their religion.
I've had men dismiss the possibility of friendship (not relationship, mind you, friendship) outright when I explain that my
blog is
about feminism and the
church (often in no fewer words than that).
The kind of things that can lead to
churches splitting, people leaving
churches, pastors writing condemnatory
blogs about the beliefs of other pastors and relationships falling apart.
Instead, with help from CT's managing editor, Katelyn Beaty, and my friends Helen Lee and Anna Broadway, I decided to try to begin a conversation here on this
blog about race and the evangelical
church.
What surprised me on this trip was that at every single event, one or two people would pull me aside and ask how I kept from getting discouraged by those big numbers that Mark Driscoll, and pastors like him, are always bragging
about — the 10 million downloads, the enormous
church planting network, the packed - out services, the hundreds of thousands of
blog visitors.
The information
about Rubio's
church history and the content of the book first came to light in a Miami Herald
blog post Thursday morning.
I appreciate it would be wrong to turn a blind eye to all the bad and not so good things the
Church does, the wrong behaviour in the name of Jesus, but why oh why do you guys on these
blogs continually go on and on
about them.
As for the Naked Pastor
blog, I think money grabbing and ego - power - trips by pastors are the least of everybody's concerns
about the institution of
church.
I am intrigued
about your
blog on the history of buildings becoming the center of worship — «The Synagogue Was The First
Church Building.»
However, one
blog I read has a post of 10 questions that all believers need to ask themselves
about the
church they attend.
We have organic
church, simple
church, and missional communities, but even here, in most of the books and
blogs I read
about this, the emphasis always seems to be that the
church is only functioning when the people gather in a certain place at a certain time, usually in a house on Sunday morning.
I liked what I saw and started reading his
blog, where he creates insightful and humorous cartoons and videos
about the
church and following Jesus.
I read your
blog post
about online
churches.
I find it interesting that the day after you wrote
about the evil treatment of ministers in the United Methodist
Church who are in favor of marriage equality in the church, you wrote this blog on how women could affect equality within the c
Church who are in favor of marriage equality in the
church, you wrote this blog on how women could affect equality within the c
church, you wrote this
blog on how women could affect equality within the
churchchurch.
ok i've decided — after soul searching and observing my and other's reactions to these religious
blog news on CNN learning more
about religion from this alone and
about the mideast than from anywhere else in my USA educated life i need to be more tolerant of others having religious based governments THAT is what is confusing me — that religion are governments are not seperated that is hard for much of USA population to understand perhaps it is for me i think you would have to actually live in a society like the mideast to truly understand it i mean — actually be part of the society the religious part is truly offputting — since most in USA seperate
church and state like —
church is for faith and imagination and celebration and family and community involvement and state is for protection and education and health and infrastructure, etc., for all it is hard to be serious
about religion — when the serious side of society is state it is hard to see religion being the serious side of enforcement — and the state enforcing the faith based side of society egad — doesn't god get lost in all that?
No wonder Siedell, at his
blog, seems a bit miffed
about the limitations of the Reformed perspective on art and the necessity of engaging the untapped art historical resources of the Orthodox
Church.
Last week, Kent Shaffer at
Church Relevance released his list of Top 200
Church Blogs, igniting multiple conversations across the faith - based blogosphere
about why 93 percent of the bloggers listed were white men, and why prominent, high - traffic bloggers like Ann Voskamp and Jen Hatmaker somehow didn't make the cut.
Do you have a link to your
blog where you tell us
about this «false teaching» that so many Christian
churches teach.
A
blog reader sent in a story
about how he and his wife are learning to be the
church in his community.
Christena Cleveland
blogs about justice, reconciliation and the history of the
Church.
Last week I wrote a post for the CNN Belief
Blog about millennials and the
Church focusing on how church leaders hoping to win twenty - somethings over with coffee shops and concerts may want to go a little deeper and consider substance over
Church focusing on how
church leaders hoping to win twenty - somethings over with coffee shops and concerts may want to go a little deeper and consider substance over
church leaders hoping to win twenty - somethings over with coffee shops and concerts may want to go a little deeper and consider substance over style.
Note: This post was written in 2007, and launched me on a study
about the
church, much of which is found in various other posts on this
blog.
As a strong Catholic who is of service to the community on a regular basis, loves the faith, respects other's rights to have their faiths as well, and — yes — has a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, I would love to see CNN's belief
blog write a story
about the positive of the Catholic faith, instead of always reading
about the people that have left and the problems people have with the
Church.
Today I was reading a discussion over at Bob Robert's
blog about how getting conversions should not be the primary goal of
church planting.