Dealing With Grief: Interview With Sister Sarah Hennessey
Elizabeth Eisenstadt Evans Elizabeth Eisenstadt Evans

Dealing With Grief: Interview With Sister Sarah Hennessey

Grief has many faces, and Sister Sarah Hennessey has seen them all — through funerals, fractured friendships and the quiet ache of transition. In a world that pushes us to grieve alone, she offers a different way: brave grieving in community. “God is the one who stays,” she says. Her vocation isn’t just spiritual direction. It’s walking with others through the sacred work of loss.

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‘The Chosen: The Last Supper Part 3’: Finale Achieves Cinematic And Spiritual Greatness
Joseph Holmes Joseph Holmes

‘The Chosen: The Last Supper Part 3’: Finale Achieves Cinematic And Spiritual Greatness

In its Season 5 finale, The Chosen reaches for more than storytelling — it brushes up against religious art. With Roumie’s Jesus agonizing in Gethsemane, the series delivers not just emotion but encounter. The camera doesn’t just observe; it bears witness. You don’t watch these scenes — you feel them. And in the space between performance and Scripture, something sacred settles in. Something that feels a lot like worship.

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‘The Chosen: The Last Supper’ Season 5 Premiere Lives Up To The Pre-Easter Hype
Joseph Holmes Joseph Holmes

‘The Chosen: The Last Supper’ Season 5 Premiere Lives Up To The Pre-Easter Hype

“The Chosen: The Last Supper” kicks off its fifth season with confidence, clarity and a whole lot of cinematic power. From Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem to his quiet moments of inner resolve, the premiere balances tension and tenderness with surprising ease. More than just great faith-based TV, this is great TV — crafted by artists who trust both the Gospel and their own creative instincts.

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Stressed Out by Stuff
Julia Ubbenga Julia Ubbenga

Stressed Out by Stuff

What if stress isn’t just from the noise or the to-do list, but from a heart that’s too full of everything but God? Maybe freedom starts not with more, but with making space for what matters most.

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Comic Brings Scriptures To Life For A New Generation Of Christians
David Trigg David Trigg

Comic Brings Scriptures To Life For A New Generation Of Christians

Simon Amadeus Pillario didn’t set out to reinvent the Bible — just to draw it, word for word. With his “Word for Word Bible Comic,” Pillario brings Scripture to life using vivid artwork, historical accuracy and every original word — no abridging, no sugarcoating. For readers daunted by columns of tiny text, this graphic novel format offers a surprising path into a deeper understanding of God’s story.

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Discover 12 Lesser Known Christian Apps
Cam Pak Cam Pak

Discover 12 Lesser Known Christian Apps

We all know YouVersion and Hallow. But what about Soulspace? Spirit Notes? Sola? Hidden in the app stores are some beautiful tools for deeper prayer, community and Scripture study — you just have to know where to look. These 12 lesser-known Christian apps aren’t second best. They’re thoughtfully built for the modern believer. Try one. Ask God to meet you there. He just might surprise you.

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How to ‘Know’ Jesus
Bill Mowry Bill Mowry

How to ‘Know’ Jesus

Knowing Jesus isn’t about collecting facts. It’s about learning his mind, his ways, his heartbeat. Scripture becomes a means of connection, not just comprehension.

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Choose To Love Others And Live With Joy
Paul Prather Paul Prather

Choose To Love Others And Live With Joy

The world may feel like it’s falling apart — wars, uncertainty, personal aches and pains. But if we’re honest, none of us ever really controlled it anyway. What we can control is how we live today. Choose to live with joy. Choose to love others well. That’s the freedom we’ve been given, even in chaos. The future is uncertain, but today is a gift. And that’s more than enough.

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Jesus’ Family Was More Dysfunctional Than Yours
Paul Prather Paul Prather

Jesus’ Family Was More Dysfunctional Than Yours

Matthew’s Gospel doesn’t shy away from Jesus’ messy family tree. His genealogy includes adulterers, outsiders and deeply flawed people — names like Tamar, Rahab, David and Bathsheba. In a world where ancestry was your résumé, Matthew highlights dysfunction on purpose. Why? To remind us that God works through broken families and broken people. If Jesus’ family was a mess, there’s hope for the rest of us too.

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Anger Can Be Good And Healthy — But Only To A Point
Paul Prather Paul Prather

Anger Can Be Good And Healthy — But Only To A Point

Anger, like all emotions, isn’t inherently bad. It just is. Even God gets angry. But left unexamined, it can become corrosive — festering in silence or exploding into harm. The healthiest anger starts with honesty: What’s really beneath the rage? Sadness? Fear? Disappointment? When anger is softened by truth and shaped by the Spirit, it becomes fuel for compassion, not destruction — a surprising virtue in a world full of vice.

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Flannery O’Connor At 100: Faith & Fiction In The American South
John Mac Ghlionn John Mac Ghlionn

Flannery O’Connor At 100: Faith & Fiction In The American South

Flannery O’Connor didn’t separate her Catholicism from her craft — she let one deepen the other. Her stories, often set in the rural South, hinge on discomfort and grace, sin and sudden revelation. Whether through a grandmother’s final act of clarity or a holy fool’s blunt truth, O’Connor reminds us: redemption doesn’t come without confrontation. A century later, her faith-infused fiction still resonates.

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You’ve Likely Heard the Serenity Prayer − but Not Its Backstory
Scott Paeth Scott Paeth

You’ve Likely Heard the Serenity Prayer − but Not Its Backstory

You’ve seen it on mugs and magnets: God grant me the serenity… But Reinhold Niebuhr’s original version was grittier — not just serenity, but grace. Not just change what can be changed, but what should. And it wasn’t “grant me” — it was “grant us.” Theologian, activist, realist — Niebuhr gave us a prayer for courage and community, rooted not in certainty, but in grace.

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God, Are You Even Listening?
Niki Hardy Niki Hardy

God, Are You Even Listening?

When God doesn’t answer, it can feel like he’s left the building. You’ve prayed, waited, knocked and nothing. But silence isn’t absence. Scripture says he hears before we even finish asking.

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Nobody Is Above Serving Others
Costi Hinn Costi Hinn

Nobody Is Above Serving Others

Jesus didn’t come to be served but to serve — and he calls us to do the same. No title, platform or gifting exempts anyone from the call to serve.

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Embarking On A Christian Pilgrimage Through Art
Jenny Taylor Jenny Taylor

Embarking On A Christian Pilgrimage Through Art

What if the antidote to our word-weary faith isn’t more information, but awe? In “Heading Home,” philanthropist Roberta Ahmanson leads a pilgrimage through cathedrals that once preached through gold, glass and grandeur. Her mission? To awaken a church dulled by screens and sermons, reminding us that beauty still speaks. Maybe, just maybe, what we need is to look up again — and be changed.

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What is Your ‘Christian Witness’?
Zach Meerkreebs Zach Meerkreebs

What is Your ‘Christian Witness’?

Your life speaks louder than your words. Your Christian witness is about living with Christ so clearly that your kindness, humility and Spirit-shaped character actually point people to him.

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‘The Last Supper’ Has Its Moments
Joseph Holmes Joseph Holmes

‘The Last Supper’ Has Its Moments

The latest faith-based film, “The Last Supper,” has passion behind it — and a few promising ideas — but falls short where it counts. As faith-based entertainment raises the bar with hits like “The Chosen,” it’s fair to expect more. Strong intentions aren’t enough. We need stories well told and beautifully made. And this one reminds us why Christian audiences stopped settling.

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Faith in the Storm: A Primer on Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Rapt Editors Rapt Editors

Faith in the Storm: A Primer on Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Dietrich Bonhoeffer refused to let faith be a private sentiment or theological exercise. When Nazi ideology infiltrated the German church, he stood against it, insisting that discipleship meant action — even when it cost him his life. His writings, from “The Cost of Discipleship” to “Letters and Papers from Prison,” continue to challenge believers today: Will we live by conviction, or will we settle for cheap grace?

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Radical Forgiveness
John Eldredge John Eldredge

Radical Forgiveness

Forgiveness isn’t a suggestion — it’s survival. Every day, offenses stack up: a rude driver, a snarky comment, a deep betrayal. Jesus calls us to forgive it all. Not later. Now.

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Faith Comes From Revelation, Not Logic
Paul Prather Paul Prather

Faith Comes From Revelation, Not Logic

Faith isn’t built on airtight arguments or intellectual gymnastics. It’s not something you reason your way into. The most devoted believers don’t talk about logic winning them over. They talk about revelation.

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