The Secret Lives of Saints
I am a (fairly late) convert to the Christian faith.
I am a (fairly late) convert to the Christian faith.
In our local auto place, Dean, a mechanic, pulls me aside. “So, Keith,” he says, “head coverings.
I remember my first experience with mourning. I was in the first grade.
Have you ever seen counterfeit money?
How do we deal with evil?
I am the first person in our house to rise.
The recent worship wars are God’s gift to the church.
What?
Should a doctrinal statement that’s nearly four-and-a-half centuries old be used to teach t
Our North American culture today is a study in contrasts.
Year of violence, grief: 27 city students slain. That was one of the startling and sad headlines
John Calvin shaped the Reformed faith, worldview, and church government.
Muhammad was respected as an upright man by those who knew him.
Beginning in the early ’70s and all through the ’80s, I pastored a church in the burgeoning charismatic movement.
A few months ago Banner editor Bob De Moor asked why so many young adults have left the Christian Refor
A recent commercial for kleenex facial tissues shows a Buddhist monk walking along a path.
Three years ago I accompanied 30 Dordt College students to a Greek Orthodox church.
On January 2 The New York Times published a piece titled “Free Will: Now You Have It, Now You Don’t” by Dennis Overbye.
Last summer delegates to the Christian Reformed Church’s annual meeting considered a study report titled “War and Peace.&rdqu
When I was a child our family faithfully worshiped at a local Christian Reformed church.
Our star, the sun, pours forth immense energy.
This year the Christian Reformed Church in North America celebrates 150 years of ministry.
Two contrasting recent articles in The Banner touch on divine providence (“Is God Responsible?” by Daniel Boerman, August 200
If you’re a black member of the Christian Reformed Church, you probably know what an identity crisis is all about.