Some of the good reads found this week:
I Know God Is Good . . . but is He also Kind? “Like so many who encounter traumatic loss, I naturally responded with questions. I didn’t doubt the core goodness of God. My struggle related to God’s kindness: ‘Lord, I know you are good, but right now, it just doesn’t seem like you are kind.'”
The Daily Deaths We Die. “Life affords many opportunities to practice dying to self so that the treasure of Jesus is made known to others. When relationships are tough, ministry seems unfruitful, life is disappointing, bodies are sick, tired, and weakening, people don’t show up, or losses pile up, here’s how you can die and live in Christ.”
Biblical Self-Examination: Questions for Growth, HT to Challies. “Self-examination is a biblical concept, but we can be swept too far into this introspection. We need to always examine ourselves in the light of God’s truth, keeping the Gospel at the center of our examination.”
The Lost Art of a Wandering Mind. “The technology boom didn’t exactly wind up creating the kind of world we had seen on The Jetsons. Instead of forming a fascinating world of automation that freed us up to pursue noble interests, technology built a new way of thinking that, sadly, has caused us to think less.”
Don’t Let Envy Poison Your Soul, HT to Challies. “In today’s modern culture, we have been conditioned to nurture envy at anyone who is perceived to be ahead of us on the career, economic, or social ladder. Envy is at the heart of our politics on all sides. Envy fuels the marketing machines. Just watch the ads. Someone owns a product/gadget/service that is making them happy, and you don’t have it. That’s not right, we are told to tell ourselves, I must have it.”
Cartel Violence Gripped a Colombian City. Then Came a Soccer Ministry, HT to Challies. “For two years, one of Saldarriaga’s friends had invited him to a soccer practice that he said was ‘different.’ Christians ran it. Saldarriaga finally relented. He had no idea that decision would change his life. And he had no idea he would be one of countless young men across Medellín who found God at soccer practice during Colombia’s infamous decades of drug cartel violence.”
The Quiet Theology of All Creatures Great and Small, HT to Lois. “We started talking about All Creatures Great and Small over coffee. Not in a ‘let’s analyze this’ way, but more like: Why does this show make me feel calmer? Why does it linger after the credits roll? My friend said it felt like a warm cup of tea while visiting her grandparents. And I heard myself say, almost without thinking, ‘It’s because the show believes small things matter.’ And that instinct, I think, resonates with something deeply Christian.”
Is It Immoral to Be a Trillionaire? “So one side claims that this incredible wealth is evil, while the other claims he’s done nothing wrong. What does the Bible have to say about wealth? Specifically, is having lots of money and being rich evil? To think rightly about this issue, we’re going to look first at what it means that Musk is a trillionaire, then we’re going to look at what the Bible has to say about wealth, and then we’re going to end with a few concluding thoughts.”
While unbelief sees the difficulties, faith sees God between itself and them.–Hudson Taylor.



















