“Gospel Links for Gospel Culture” is a weekly round-up of content to encourage you in your faith and ministry.
The Gospel Project’s editorial team contributed to this post. Photo: Pixabay
Gracious Confidence Is More Appealing Than Angst and Doubt
Trevin Wax:There’s nothing attractive about inviting people to become part of a community that doesn’t know what it believes, or that is fundamentally uncomfortable with its own teachings. Yet this is the approach that I see among many evangelicals, particularly those of my own generation, who are trying to gain a hearing for the gospel.
Two Genres Christians Forget to Read, but Should
Jaclyn Parrish encourages believers to engage with two (surprising) genres—satire and horror.The “ABCs of Salvation” is Not the Gospel
Aaron Wilson:In its simplest form, the ABCs of salvation is not the gospel; rather, the acts of admitting, believing, and confessing (and you might tack on, repenting) are all biblical responses to the gospel.
So You Hate Biblical Womanhood
Jasmine Holmes:The question I was asked at the conference sprang to mind as I tried to understand exactly why I felt this way. “As you’re on this journey to learn what the Bible actually says about women and to reconcile it with what you always thought it said, do you ever struggle with guilt or cognitive dissonance?”
I Don’t Want to Change the World Anymore
Chris Martin:I can’t say for sure if my heart was in the right or wrong place when I used to want to change the world. Sometimes I am sure my motives were mostly good. But I know that, many times, I wanted to change the world so I would be remembered.
The Gospel and Curiosity
Barnabas Piper discusses the relationship between the gospel and curiosity in a video he recorded for us earlier this year:Curiosity and the gospel are not two things we usually associate with each other, and I think that might be part of our problem in the church. It’s at least indicative of why our churches often have a culture that doesn’t really reflect the gospel.
Wrestling the Giant: Why I Deleted Instagram
Andrew Peterson:I deleted Instagram from my phone earlier this summer. A few months before that I did the same with the Facebook app. Our family went on a pretty big adventure for a few weeks, and more than once my instinct was to share a photo of it on social media, but when I realized the app wasn’t on my phone I felt a flash of frustration followed by a sigh of relief—then I moved on, happy to be fully present where I was, when I was, how I was with those I love most.
The Gospel Project’s editorial team contributed to this post. Photo: Pixabay