To Live is Christ
Reconsiders the 1960s generation as an unlikely role-model.
Reconsiders the 1960s generation as an unlikely role-model.
Examines the problem of knowing the truth about our leaders in a media culture.
Explores the challenges and opportunities of living in a particular culture.
Assessed the real dangers of the Y2K problem.
Discusses the nature of history and the proneness to revisionism in the writing of history.
Describes the shift of our government from protector to social engineer.
Explains and critiques the argument of "one of the most important books written within the past 150 years."
Explains the nature and impact of postmodernism.
Illuminates the concept of a worldview and why it is important.
Shows how true love sometimes requires a painful honesty.
Considers the worth and meaning of a human life in the face of great suffering and loss.
Argues that dualism is a continuing trap for today's church.
Explores how moral relativism has contributed to our inability to understand the world.
Shows the difficulties of growing up to learn responsibility in an age of affluence.
Critiques the idea of "death with dignity" from a biblical perspective.
Explores the process of grief and the ways God uses that process in the lives of Christians.
Encourages us to move past blaming others for past hurts and to take responsibility for ourselves.
Assesses the spiritual dangers of hiding from our own guilt.
Examines the ambiguous nature of the believer's experience in this life.
Explores the connection between genuine Christian faith and our attitudes about money.