Do you long for heaven, or has the spiritual appetite for your eternal home been dulled? In this lesson, Ken Boa discusses the need to cultivate a spiritual appetite for heaven.
Do you long for heaven, or has the spiritual appetite for your eternal home been dulled? In this lesson, Ken Boa discusses the need to cultivate a spiritual appetite for heaven.
Look around you, watch a minute of the news, and you will see suffering. It is an unavoidable part of life. But where did evil come from? As we ask this question and look for answers, we’ll find that the biblical Christian worldview gives us a robust answer to the problem of evil.
Despite our attempts to solve the problem of evil by eliminating either God or evil, only a recognition that our good God will conquer evil gives us hope.
We have been created and redeemed to glorify God as living incarnations of His wisdom. In the conclusion of his "Life of Wisdom" series, Ken Boa discusses ten attributes that should mark a wise disciple of Jesus
We all ought to be more and more homesick. We are pilgrims, sojourners, wayfarers, aliens, and exiles on this earth. Our journey here is brief, ephemeral. But what we do today matters.
Penned in 1667, John Milton's "Paradise Lost" is an epic poem that weaves together all the threads of Scripture to present the story of God’s redemption of humanity through a rich tapestry of extraordinary imagery.
God put a longing for eternity in our hearts; when we die, time will continue forever, in a way only God can see fully, with qualitative differences from our current experience of time. The process of aging will cease, and time will no longer constrain us or drag us down.
Part 2 of this two-part series considers the believer’s resurrected body and its implications. Content is drawn from Ken Boa's book "God, I Don't Understand."