April 30, 2015
April 28, 2015
Chalk Art For The Life of the World
In his review of the Acton Institute’s film series, For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles, Andy Crouch noted its artistic merits, observing how well it conveyed “deeply Christian themes in widely accessible ways.” Continue Reading...
April 28, 2015
Who Earns Minimum Wage And Why It’s Okay
April 20, 2015
Detroit: ‘It Didn’t Have To Be This Way’
April 15, 2015
Minimum Wage, Adulthood And Choices
April 07, 2015
Music Box: A Parable on Finding Joy at Work (and in Life)
When struggling with “work that wounds”— work that’s “cross-bearing, self-denying, and life-sacrificing,” as Lester DeKoster describes it — we can content ourselves by remembering that God is with us in the workplace and our work has meaning. Continue Reading...
April 06, 2015
Pizza, Pluralism, and the Rise of the Conformity Mob
March 24, 2015
The Greatest ‘Privilege’ In America? Get Married, Stay Married
February 24, 2015
Worldwide Flight From Family Is Killing Us
February 13, 2015
Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the economy of love
On August 12, 1943, months after having been arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned, the Lutheran pastor and theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote to his young fiancée Maria von Wedemeyer:
When I consider the state of the world, the total obscurity enshrouding our personal destiny, and my present imprisonment, our union—if it wasn’t frivolity, which it certainly wasn’t—can only be a token of God’s grace and goodness, which summon us to believe in him. Continue Reading...