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Just Thinking

12/29/2009
Room For Me
He had given them so much. He had asked for so little. Yet they had failed him. And what was Jesus’s response to them?

12/29/2009
Apologetics : Why your church needs it
It is often said that ideas have consequences. Such a maxim can only benefit us as we determine not to allow it to degenerate into a meaningless cliché.

12/29/2009
A Window Into the Heart of God
As we approached our destination, my friend began to carefully make adjustments to my head covering to ensure that only my eyes could be seen.

07/02/2009
Hyperseeing and the Towers of Babel
On the influence of media and technology, discussions abound.   “Is Google making us stupid?” “Is Twitter bad for the soul?” “Is Facebook changing the way we relate?”   In fact, there seems a recent upsurge in articles questioning our faltering minds, morals, and communities (ironically reaching us through the very mediums that are blamed for it).  Some note the shifting of thought patterns, attention spans that are beginning to prefer 140 characters or less, information gluttony, news addiction, and so on.

07/02/2009
Of Isms and Rabbit Trails
Among my toughest audiences in apologetics are undoubtedly my two little boys.  From the time words started forming on their lips, questions of various kinds have been a staple around our home—the most formidable one being, “Why, daddy?”  More than any other of our appetites, I strongly suspect that thirst for knowledge and the occasional thrill of discovery have played the greatest role in shaping human history.  From the vast machinery of the news media to the intricate systems of the educational enterprise, from specialized research institutions to the multifaceted world of religious devotion, human hunger for knowledge is the oil that greases the mill of civilization.

07/01/2009
Inseparable Companions

Spring cleaning in my house is rarely completely finished.  Year after year, though I have forgotten about them until they are dusted and put back on a closet shelf, I still can’t bring myself to let go of them.  They are books by the late cartoonist Charles Schulz.  As a child I treasured his picture paperbacks, reading them over and over, and eagerly awaited his holiday television specials.  Yet “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” evoked mixed emotions in me—and does so to this day. 

01/26/2009
An Uncompromising Faith Lived Out with Grace

The following message was delivered in Chicago, Illinois, in November 2008

I recall a story about a man who used to manage a bank. When he retired at the end of the 1980s, the chairman of the bank remarked, “Thomas, you’ve been with the bank for forty-five years. What’s the biggest change you’ve seen in that time?” The man paused and then replied, “Air conditioning.”

01/26/2009
Defending Christianity in a Secular Culture

Interview with Ravi Zacharias by Richard L. Schoonover, associate editor of Enrichment journal. Used with permission of Enrichment journal.

 Website: http://enrichmentjournal@ag.org. This interview appeared in the Fall 2008 issue.

Attacks on Christianity and the church are rampant in today’s society. Unbelievers once revered the church and its teachings, but today they scorn them. Films such as The Da Vinci Code and organizations such as The Jesus Seminar attack the credibility of Jesus and the Bible. But how do Christians answer these attacks on Christianity?

09/19/2008
Is Believing in God a Psychological Crutch?
It was strange walking down a hospital corridor with a growing sense of foreboding, getting closer to the consultant’s office and wondering what he would say. I was fifteen years old and had the afternoon off school to receive the results from the operation I had undergone the week before. A mole on my leg had begun to turn dark, and my doctor had decided to remove it as a precaution. My mother and I entered the office together and sat down. The consultant leaned over the desk and said, “I’m afraid it’s cancer.”

09/19/2008
At the Border Crossing of Doubt and Hope
It seemed like yet another routine border crossing in what was then Communist-ruled Czechoslovakia. The year was 1981; Leonid Brezhnev was the head of the Soviet Union, and half of Europe languished under the Communist vision and control. As a young, enthusiastic, and eager Christian, I had joined a mission whose primary task was to help the church in Eastern Europe. This involved transporting Bibles, hymn books, and Christian literature to believers behind what Winston Churchill called the “Iron Curtain.”

06/09/2008
National Day of Prayer Address
Ravi Zacharias was the 2008 Honorary Chairman of the National Day of Prayer. He delivered the following keynote address at The Cannon House in Washington, DC, on May 1, 2008.

06/09/2008
The New Atheism and Morality
Though the chorus of voices decrying belief in God has been humming in the ideological background for centuries, it seems to have reached a crescendo with the emergence of a movement that has been dubbed the new atheism. The trademark of this new brand of atheism is its vitriolic attack on religion. To its advocates, religious beliefs are not only false; they are also dangerous and must be expunged from all corners of society. The pundits of the new atheism are not content to nail discussion theses on the door of religion; they are also busy delivering eviction notices to the allegedly atavistic elements of an otherwise seamlessly progressive atheistic evolution of Homo sapiens.

02/01/2008
An Apologetic for Apologetics
The word apologetics often creates immediate discussion. To the uninitiated in the discipline, the common line is “What are you apologizing for?” To the one who knows and understands the discipline, simply raising the topic evokes debate.

01/01/2008
The Trinity as a Paradigm for Spiritual Transformation
It is a sad fact that the doctrine of the Trinity has been believed in but rarely preached on in our churches. Living these last few years in Singapore, sandwiched between the two Islamic countries of Malaysia and Indonesia, I have half-humorously, half-seriously commented to Christian leaders, “We all believe in the Trinity, but we pray to the Trinity that nobody would question us about the Trinity!”

11/01/2007
The Test of Trust
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will make your paths straight." Proverbs 3:5-6 were some of the first Scripture verses I memorized as a child. For some reason, the words seemed to bounce with joy, energy, and a sense of lightness as I learned them.

10/17/2007
Our Disappointments Matter to God
I want to look at the theme of God as the Grand Weaver. When I was a teenager growing up in Delhi I was really not doing very well. I was failing at everything. For those of you who have read my story in Walking from East to West, you’ll know failure was writ large on my life. My dad basically looked at me and said, “You know, you’re going to be a huge embarrassment to the family—one failure after another.”

10/01/2007
Tiny Beginnings
When I was a little girl, my father would affectionately call me kaduku, which means "mustard seed." Since most of my friends were called the more common food-inspired nicknames of honey and sugar, I never understood why I was compared to such a strange item. Years later, I described my bewilderment to a friend as we were preparing a curry dish—mustard seeds in hand.

04/01/2007
Your DNA Matters
My father-in-law passed away a mere three months before I began to pen these words. His downward slide had begun a few weeks before, when what started as an ordinary day ended with life’s sunset in sight.

04/01/2007
Misplaced
I ran away once as a kid. I was mad about something ten year-olds get mad about--mad enough that I had to step up my normal fit or else risk being interpreted as only typically mad. The most untypical thing I could think to do was to pack a backpack of snacks and books and run away. So I ran to the backyard, climbed into my tree fort, and sat fuming in the snow.

04/01/2007
Keeping an Eye
Growing up in my grandmother's house was anything but dull. She is extremely superstitious, and we had to comply with her many interesting but puzzling ways around the house. For example, no one is allowed to give a compliment directly. Instead, to pay a compliment one must utter the opposite of what one means.

07/01/2006
The Pressure of Novelty
I recently concluded a tour of several Christian colleges where I had various conversations of a similar ilk. In discussing the church and the relevance of many contemporary expressions of it, I realized on reflection that for many people, words like “history” meant something the individual may have become aware of in just the last two or three weeks.

06/22/2006
Doubt and the Vain Search for Certainty
Deep within all of us lies a longing for absolute security, to be able to know with absolute certainty. We feel that we should be absolutely sure of everything that we believe. Surely, we feel, we ought to be able to prove everything that we believe.

04/01/2006
Evening Prayer
There are stories that shape our lives for a season or, in hindsight, frame them for the future. They speak to us from where we are, or especially, from where we wish to be. The stories of Scripture are rooted in history and some come readily to mind: of Joseph, Daniel, Mary. Their lives provide perspective and their prayers nourish trust.

12/18/2005
The Origin and Meaning of Time
“He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also he has put eternity in their hearts, except that no one can find out the work that God does from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NKJV)

12/10/2005
You Don’t Honestly Believe That!
In some countries of the world the Bible is contraband. Smuggling operations exist with the sole aim of getting them secretly across closed borders and into the hands of those who want to read it. I will never forget getting off a train in an Asian country at four o’clock one morning and making my way to a rendezvous with three indigenous church leaders.

12/01/2005
The Silence of Christmas and the Scream of the Tsunami: Soul-Speak in a Suicidal Culture
The very first Christmas card that I received this December was from a Sikh friend in Thailand. He and his family fondly wished my family and me a Merry Christmas and a joyous New Year. As the cards continued to come in from all over the world, I realized that some were from Buddhists, some from Hindus, and yes, there were even similar greetings from Muslims.

11/15/2005
On Leadership and Calling: An Interview with Ravi Zacharias
Ravi Zacharias was interviewed in April 2005 by Major John Carter of The Salvation Army for a leadership class at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary (Charlotte, NC branch).

11/01/2005
A Life Out of Nothing
Some books are difficult to write; others border on the almost impossible. This one is in the latter category. Many friends and even strangers over the years have asked if I would pen such a story, and when Zondervan asked me to write a book of my memoirs, I concluded that the time had come.

10/01/2005
The Well Squandered Life: Influential Lives of Obscurity
Not long ago I read an article in the Atlanta Journal Constitution that gave me cause for dismay. The article announced local auditions for a new reality television show. Unlike so many reality shows, this series does not portend to be vulgar, voyeuristic, or sensual. “Pulpit Masters” is meant to be an inspirational program, identifying the next superstar preacher to join the ranks of the pop stars lifted from obscurity by “American Idol.”

06/01/2005
Praying With Our Eyes Closed
“My name is Ruth. I grew up with my younger sister, Lucille, under the care of my grandmother, Mrs. Sylvia Foster, and when she died, of her sisters-in-law, Misses Lily and Nona Foster, and when they fled, of her daughter, Mrs. Sylvia Fisher.” So begins Housekeeping, the highly praised first novel by Marilynne Robinson, who was recently awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her second novel, Gilead.

02/18/2005
First A Story
"Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Tell me if you understand." God to Job in the whirlwind
To a child of four or five, the rejoinder sounded something like the response of a parent who had reached the end of her rope with the current line of questioning.

12/11/2004
The Will To Do
I have heard it said that the longest journey in life is from the head to the heart. Another way to say the same thing is that the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. Yet another aphorism of our time is that beginning well is a momentary thing; finishing well is a lifelong thing.

11/01/2004
A Conversation with Matt Redman
Danielle DuRant spoke with worship leader and songwriter Matt Redman in the summer of 2004 in Atlanta about his new book Facedown (Regal Books, 2004) and the companion CD. Matt has written a number of songs sung by churches worldwide, including “Better Is One Day,” “The Heart of Worship,” and “Blessed Be Your Name.”

10/10/2004
Wrestling with Belteshazzar
I guess there’s a certain irony in reading a book subtitled Embracing Life As It Is while waiting for your car at the alignment shop. Mind you, my car is ten years old, has never been in a wreck, and I faithfully take care of its dependable German body. Thus if my mechanic returns to announce to me that he couldn’t quite align the tires and I should just embrace this situation, no doubt I’ll find another mechanic.

05/22/2004
The Apologetic of Humility
"The throne of humility must be the heart. I do hate, of all things, that humility which lives in the face."  Charles Spurgeon

05/12/2004
A Word from the "Wise"
Deep inside the mountain, the Mines of Moria labyrinth through the underworld. Dwarves once flourished in the great halls of stone. Here, the Fellowship of the Ring finds itself in a maze of caverns to underpass the eyes of the Enemy. Their quest, for those of you who have read the book or seen the film, is an anti-quest. They are not in search of a prize; rather, their purpose is to destroy the prize.

05/05/2004
Apologetics: Shadow or Reality?
In that interesting encounter between Jesus and the paralytic given to us by Luke, we see a defining reminder of the relationship between evidence and faith, the temporal and the eternal. The friends of this paralyzed man did everything they could to bring him within the sight and touch of Jesus (see Luke 5:17-26).

05/01/2004
Beyond Reasonable Doubt
"More consequences for thought and action follow from the affirmation or denial of God than from answering any other question." Mortimer Adler, coeditor, Encyclopedia Britannica

01/11/2004
Knowing and Seeing
Our knowledge of God, our world, and ourselves is relational and very human. We do not know mere propositions “out there”—for example, “God exists”—for to know this truth necessarily implies some sort of relationship with the subject. We are persons in relation to other persons, and we know subjects in relation to other subjects.

12/15/2003
Reading: The Fingerprints on Your Soul
Lost somewhere in the enormous plains of time, there wanders a dwarf who is the image of God, who has produced on a yet more dwarfish scale an image of creation. The pigmy picture of God we call man; the pigmy picture of creation we call Art.
G. K. Chesterton, “Lunacy and Letters”



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