Posts by Matthew Anderson
Should yoga be banned from public schools as a religious activity?
Three views on a possible church-state stretch.
Read MoreFive fundamental questions conservative evangelicals must address
Conservative evangelicals have not yet grappled with the fundamental questions that determine the plausibility of our witness.
Read MoreThe ordinary is not comfortable: Richard Stearns’ “radical” misreading
Ordinary moments intersect with eternity, where the meaning of our lives hangs. Focusing on the mundane isn’t a call to comfort: it’s a terrifying call to remember the judgment which we stand beneath.
Read MoreThe vocation of writing when words are cheap
The value of sentences as a raw material has dropped. How should those who love words respond?
Read MoreSex and sacrifice: On the structure of autoeroticism
Sacrifice and self-giving for another’s good go together, even in sexual desire.
Read MoreBlue like orthodoxy: when Donald Miller met G.K. Chesterton
Chesterton is magical because he kept his sense of humor while using it at the expense of his intellectual foes, and in the defense of dogmas.
Read MoreHow Dallas Willard changed American Christianity
“Jesus offers Himself as God’s doorway into the life that is truly life. Confidence in Him leads us today, as in other times, to become apprentices to eternal living.” —The Divine Conspiracy, Dallas Willard
Read MoreThink like progressives: marriage and the pro-life movement
The demographic case for the future of marriage looks bleak. Conservatives will need to think more like progressives.
Read MoreHere come the radicals!
David Platt, Francis Chan, Shane Claiborne, and now Kyle Idleman are dominating the Christian best-seller lists by attacking our comfortable Christianity. But is ‘radical faith’ enough?
Read MoreMarijuana, coffee, and our medicated age
The moral nature of any artificial stimulation or technological intervention into the body’s processes depends upon our understanding of the human body’s nature and purpose, and its meaning within creation.
Read MoreMartin Luther on the passions of evangelical politics
Luther’s account of the passions in his political theology provides helpful guidance for evangelicals.
Read MoreWhat is marriage?
The argument is probably the most sophisticated natural law defense of marriage to date. Yet while rigorously argued, the book doesn’t require technical philosophical ability to be understood and appreciated.
Read MoreIntellectual empathy and overcoming disagreement
One way to cultivate such common ground in our own local communities is through what some of called “intellectual empathy,” or the decision to enter into a person’s way of the seeing the world and look along with them.
Read MoreThe election disaster? Social conservatives and hope
We as Christians are called to a politics of hope, and that must frame our public discourse.
Read MoreControversy and interpretation: A review of *biblical womanhood*
Rachel Held Evans’ book on biblical womanhood was entertaining, but ultimately dissatisfying.
Read MoreCan there be an evangelical political theology?
The church’s life together is the soil from which political theology springs.
Read MoreOur delightfully strange world
On a first read, though, Orthodoxy almost appears not to be a book at all, but rather a long string of glittery sentences, each threatening to undo our reading by drawing us into the world anew.
Read MoreCan corporations be Christian?
Corporate policy, personal beliefs and the rapidly disappearing line between them.
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