Every church needs realism.
Leaders should understand their context. They should know their numbers. They should face challenges honestly. Denial helps no one, and ignoring reality only delays necessary decisions.
But there is a danger that often goes unnoticed.
Realism, when separated from faith, becomes limitation.
Why Christians Have Become the Problem
Are Christians actually making it harder to turn to Jesus? The honest answer might be yes and it's something we need to talk about.
If your social feed is like mine, it's more polarized, partisan, and angry than ever. And Christians aren't providing an alternative to the outrage online. Too often, we're fueling it.
When Christians lose their minds, people lose their faith. In this video, I break down why this matters more than most of us realize — and give you five practical things you can do to protect your influence and stop driving people away from the faith.
Why I remain an Episcopalian
Bad bishops are not a new problem. Bad doctrine promoted by those charged to guard the faith is not a new problem either. What is new, at least for many traditionalists in the Episcopal Church, is the exhaustion that follows years of controversy, litigation, decline, and the wearying sense that every General Convention or episcopal election will bring another test of conscience.
The temptation is understandable: walk away. Find a purer body, a safer jurisdiction, a parish where the fight is over. But the Anglican answer should be slower, sterner, and more catholic. The first duty of a faithful Episcopalian is not escape, but fidelity. One may have to resist. One may have to protest. One may even have to disobey a particular command that contradicts the Word of God. But one should not make separation the default proof of seriousness.
This is not an argument for staying no matter what. That would be servility, not Anglicanism. Fidelity is owed first to Jesus Christ, to the Holy Scriptures, and to the apostolic gospel.
If remaining in a particular parish, diocese, or institution requires the denial of Christ, complicity in sin, or the surrender of the gospel, then conscience has reached a grave boundary. My own journey through the Episcopal Church over the past thirty years has brought me hard up against this boundary, compelling me to leave the Diocese of Pennsylvania, denying me parish calls, blocking preference, promotion and prestige as it is measured among clergy in the church.
Anglican without Canterbury or why is Sydney in a fellowship with women priests?
One measure of something important being announced is whether people are still talking about it afterwards. The conservative Anglican network Gafcon’s conference in Abuja in March passes that test because it is still being talked about.
First women priests ordained in the Church of the Province of Central Africa
The first women to be ordained as priests has been held in the Province of the Church of Central Africa. 14 women were ordained on May 17, 2026, at a service at the Anglican Holy Cross Cathedral in Gaborone, Botswana.
Catholic group issues warning to Vatican ahead of potential schism
The traditionalist Catholic Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) and the Vatican appear headed toward a collision course over the group’s plan to ordain bishops without papal approval.
The SSPX has said it will proceed with consecrations on July 1, despite a Vatican warning that such a move would constitute a “schismatic act” and trigger automatic excommunication under Church law.
Anti-Christian Bias report exalts Calvinism and lies as normative
Those of us who identify as Christian and do not adhere to the government’s preferred version of Christianity are in this administration’s crosshairs. We must recognize this moment for the theological crisis it is; we must understand that our expression of Christian faith is under attack and act accordingly.
This report and the government’s elevation of a form of Reformed Theology as the normative expression of the faith is a direct consequence of Christian nationalism.
It is one thing for people to abide by Reformed Theology (or Calvinism). It’s another for the government to promote this version of Christianity.
Pentecost: Its meaning, significance and relevance for Christians today
Today is Pentecost - a special day in the Christian calendar that many Christians may have heard of, but do not always fully understand. Yet Pentecost is incredibly important, because it is deeply connected to the work of the Holy Spirit and the birth of the church.
So, what exactly happened on that day? And why does Pentecost still matter for us as Christians today?
Anglicans and Methodists have traditionally celebrated the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon Jesus' followers on the Day of Pentecost not only on Whit Sunday but also for the entire week after Whit Sunday. This week of celebrating the gift of the Holy Spirit is called Whitsuntide.What are the fruits of the Holy Spirit?
24 May 2026 is Pentecost Sunday, when Christians recall the importance of the Holy Spirit. The fruits of the Spirit are the virtues that are produced in the life of a believer through the work of the Holy Spirit. This is the story....
Why Don’t Our Sermons Change People?
Many of us in conservative evangelical churches rightly prize biblical preaching. We want careful exegesis. We want theological depth. We want context, structure, precision, and faithfulness to the text. And rightly so. The preacher is not called to entertain, speculate, or offer therapeutic musings detached from Scripture. He is called to “preach the word” (2 Timothy 4:2).
But somewhere along the way, many sermons have quietly become lectures with a Bible verse attached.
The result? Congregations leave informed but remain unchanged. Minds stimulated, consciences untouched. Notes taken, but sins unmortified. We explain the text carefully, but often fail to press the text home.
And then we wonder why transformation feels rare.
In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV says AI must serve humanity, not the powerful few
In ‘Magnifica Humanitas,’ Leo's 83-page manifesto on AI, the pope tackles the social, economic and political challenges associated with artificial intelligence.
Also See: With his first encyclical, Pope Leo hits it out of the ballparkHow to Pick a Winning Children’s Ministry Curriculum
Is finding a new children’s ministry curriculum on your mind? Consider these factors to ensure you choose the best fit for your ministry.
Spiritual Matters Missing From Many Churchgoers’ Conversations
Living unashamed is a key signpost of discipleship, but many churchgoers don’t see spiritual matters as pervasive throughout their lives.
Cultivating a Congregation That Lives Unashamed of the Gospel
As believers mature, they grow increasingly unashamed of their faith, unabashed in displaying the work of the gospel in their lives.














