Artists ask others to taste the excess of the goodness of God through their art. They invite us into God’s economy of abundance in a world that operates out of a sense of scarcity. David O Taylor explains how art demonstrates there is more to life in God’s world than we can measure. An intense experience of pleasure reminds us that it is all grace.
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Does Your Work Matter to God?
By: David H. Kim “It is the business of the Church to recognize that the secular vocation, as such, is sacred. Christian people, and particularly perhaps the Christian clergy, must get it firmly into their heads that when a man or woman is called to a particular job of secular work that is as true a vocation as though he or she were called to specifically relig...
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Eyes of the Tiger
Julian Robertson, the Legendary Tiger Hedge Fund manager, answers questions on his career, money, and faith experience.
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Recapture the
Heart of
Calvinism
By: David H. Kim In an article published in the 1894 Presbyterian and Reformed Review, Herman Bavinck articulated a interesting distinction between Reformed and Calvinism writing, “the former (Reformed) being more limited and less comprehensive than the latter. Reformed expresses merely a religious and ecclesiastical distinction; it is a purely theological conce...
Read More »Why a Center for Faith and Work
By: Katherine Leary Alsdorf One of the things Martin Luther made very clear 400 years ago was that a “priestly calling” was in no way more pleasing to God than any other calling or vocation. No one’s role or vocation – from Tim Keller’s to the most recent college grad – is more important than another in the eyes of God. When the church, as &ldquo...
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Connections
Ei featured in this article by Graham Scharf in Comment.
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