As Christians, how do we come back from this election loss?
For Christians who care deeply about biblical values in public life, this week’s results across Pennsylvania and other states were discouraging.


For Christians who care deeply about biblical values in public life, this week’s results across Pennsylvania and other states were discouraging.

When schools promote ideas that parents consider harmful to their children, challenging those practices isn't engaging in political theater — it's fulfilling a moral, parental obligation.

This theological truth doesn't absolve us from the responsibility to be good stewards of our citizenship and to vote.

In an era where self-help gurus and pop psychology often masquerade as spiritual or biblical wisdom, it's high time we, as Christians, take a hard look at what we believe and why.

The recent Supreme Court decision may be disheartening, but it should serve as a rallying cry for pastors and church leaders to step up and meet this moral challenge head-on.

The results beg the question — either a significant percent of Christians don’t know what an abortion is, or they have no concept of what the words “morally wrong” mean.
