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John Lennox: If God, why coronavirus?
Video: I Am Pilate: The outstanding short film you need to watch this Easter
Coronavirus Could Kill Consumer Christianity
Hungry for Hope: A Work-Place Shooting, COVID-19, and Our Greatest Longings
John Lennox: If God, why coronavirus?
Video: A Live Conversation with Lee Strobel: The Case for the ResurrectionThe coronavirus is so called because it visibly resembles a crown (“corona” in Latin). A crown is a symbol of power and authority - and certainly this virus has colossal power over us humans. It is invisible to the naked eye, and yet just think about what it has forced many millions - indeed, billions - of us to do and not do. It also forcibly reminds us of our vulnerability. It is easy to forget that we humans are mortal. The coronavirus is evidence that both our relationship with creation and creation’s relationship with us are disordered; and that this is not an accident.
Sean McDowell and Lee Strobel talk about the compelling evidence for the resurrection and take live questions.
Video: I Am Pilate: The outstanding short film you need to watch this Easter
Don't miss this gripping new film which puts a modern day twist on the Easter story, says Sam Hailes
Coronavirus Could Kill Consumer Christianity
Preparing for the Worst, Hoping for the Best: A New Doctor’s Reflections on COVID-19One of the potential positive effects of COVID-19 on Christianity is that the epidemic is likely to kill off consumer Christianity, at least in the short term. And while there is certainly plenty to lament about how this crisis is wrecking lives, economies, and unraveling all the world’s plans in stunningly rapid fashion, the virus’s attack on comfortable Christianity could be something we eventually celebrate.
In Times Like These: Learning to Love by Letting GoAs we prepare for the worst and hope for the best, we have daily opportunities to make meaningful impacts on each other and on our communities. We have come together in a new way, and I suspect this will ultimately reshape the future landscapes of our medical practice and our health-care system.
In times like these, we’re called, like God’s own passion, to find home again–to relocate our hearts in suffering by finding the greater joy that comes by letting go, and the home-coming of being found again.
Hungry for Hope: A Work-Place Shooting, COVID-19, and Our Greatest Longings
"Hope is intimately connected to desire. Buddhists fast, in part, to drain themselves of desire, and with it, hope. Hope is what happens when you combine a desire with something you think can actually happen, a fact that distinguishes it from a mere wish. For instance, I’m writing this article from my home on the 28th floor of my apartment building. I have a childish desire to fly off my balcony and over the skyline of Toronto. Calling this hope, however, wouldn’t be accurate because I don’t have any realistic expectation of ever being able to fly. Conversely, there are plenty of things I expect to happen but don’t desire, yet more live-action remakes of Disney classics, for example. Because I don’t desire it I can’t say I hope for it. But I desire this global pandemic to end, and for many concrete reasons we can expect it to, and thus I can say: I hope it will end." (4/5/20)
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