
‘Defender of The Faith’: the British crown, Baptist history, and religious freedom
While I wish Charles III a long reign and the American democratic experiment an even longer life, I find myself intrigued and amazed at how times change, yet how the need to defend the faiths is not only the work of the Crown or seat of government, but also very much in our own convictional DNA as Baptists.

The song goes on, despite the world at its worst
Earlier this year, Salman Rushdie said that "song is stronger than death." I continue to pray for Rushdie's recovery and return to whatever public life he can in the future. His song will go on long after his death, which I hope will be by natural causes long into the future. The song of the human spirit in its fullness cannot be quashed or quelled.

The new era or the same old world: “Downton Abbey” speaks to past and present
While the world of "Downton Abbey: A New Era" may seem distant from our time, we find its varied narrative threads speaking to us as the characters learn to live in the present, deal with the past, and enter the future.

The nonsense of Easter
Idle tales and brokenhearted disciples gave way to the cries of “He is risen!” and “I believe!”

Repenting . . . made less easy
For Christian believers, to repent means turning our lives to the way of Jesus. Rather than wearing ourselves down running the well-trodden path of the rat race, we Christians seek to trace our way through the contours and questions of the gospel.