Church

Does Your Pastor Have a Biblical Worldview? (Spoiler:  Most Don’t!)

Does Your Pastor Have a Biblical Worldview?                     (Spoiler:  Most Don’t!)

Recently, the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University surveyed 1,000 American Christian pastors to understand better the worldviews that drive their thinking and behavior. The survey of these pastors revealed that a large majority do not possess a “biblical worldview.”

What is a biblical worldview?

What is the Strength of Your Church?

What is the Strength of Your Church?

In the spring of this year, Christianity Today released a small publication, CTPastors.com. Within that publication, is an article entitled, “Little Church, Big Faith,” which summarized the 2020 Faith Communities Today (FACT) survey on the state of the Church in America.

The survey revealed that the median attendance at church on a given Sunday is now half what it was 20 years ago, dropping from an attendance of 137 to 65. Whereas in the year 2000, 45 percent of churches had an average weekly attendance of 99 or fewer people, today 65 percent of churches report that smaller level of attendance.

But the news is not all bad.

The Seven Sticks

The Seven Sticks

Most of Aesop’s fables ring as true today as they did when he wrote them—600 years before Christ.

How can these short stories speak to us more than 2,000 years after he wrote them?

It is because though times change, the essence of what makes us “human” does not. We have the same fears, desires, and hopes as those who lived throughout the centuries.

We simply are not all that unique.

And, that is why the Bible continues to instruct us today. People are people. And, we are pretty predictable.

A good example of Aesop’s fables being relevant today is the story of the Seven Sticks.

What Are the Three Major Branches of the Church? And, What Do They Believe?

What Are the Three Major Branches of the Church? And, What Do They Believe?

It has only been recently that I have begun to learn more about the “Three Big Branches” of the church: the Eastern Orthodox church, the Catholic Church, and the Protestant Tradition.

When I was growing up, I attended the Lutheran Church. One of my best friends attended the Greek Orthodox church and another attended the Roman Catholic church, so I understood there were three branches of Christianity. And though the services seemed different in content, I never really looked behind the services themselves to better understand what the denominations hold as core beliefs.

So, it was with great interest that I read..