I just finished black and white bible, black and blue wife by Ruth A. Tucker. I was introduced to Tucker’s writing back in the 1980s when she was a well-regarded professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity in Deerfield, IL, just outside of Chicago. Two of her books that influenced my thinking were From Jerusalem to IrianContinueContinue reading “Domestic abuse by those in the ministry…”
Author Archives: Don Follis
The donkey on Palm Sunday is highly valued, and so are we!
The Donkey – G. K. ChestertonWhen fishes flew and forests walkedAnd figs grew upon thorn,Some moment when the moon was bloodThen surely I was born.With monstrous head and sickening cryAnd ears like errant wings,The devil’s walking parodyOn all four-footed things.The tattered outlaw of the earth,Of ancient crooked will;Starve, scourge, deride me: I am dumb,I keepContinueContinue reading “The donkey on Palm Sunday is highly valued, and so are we!”
The constant, enduring message of Lent … “Be merciful to me a sinner”
My Sunday column in today’s Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette arose from reading one of the most emotionally stirring books I’ve read in a long, long time. Here is the column…—–The painful emotions I felt reading Sue Klebold’s book “A Mother’s Reckoning – Living in the aftermath of Tragedy,” (Crown Publishers, 2016), took me back to the feelingsContinueContinue reading “The constant, enduring message of Lent … “Be merciful to me a sinner””
You are free from the penalty of sin … not the presence or power of sin.
“For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body ruled by sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves to sin — because anyone who has died has been set free from sin.” Romans 6:6-7I’ve talked with people who say,”How can that be sinceContinueContinue reading “You are free from the penalty of sin … not the presence or power of sin.”
Developing life-giving metrics for the pastor is very hard
Very regularly I talk with pastors who tell me they struggle with setting measurable goals (metrics, they now call them). Because I have lived in the pastor world for more than three-and-a-half decades, I can imagine what they are saying and feeling. Is writing, say, a sermon, part of a pastor’s work life? I betContinueContinue reading “Developing life-giving metrics for the pastor is very hard”
Which way will we choose?
There are two gates, two roads, two trees, two followers, two builders… Matthew 7:13-27″Enter the narrow gate … .””Narrow is the road that leads to life … .””By their fruit you will recognize them … .””Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of Heaven, but only the one who does theContinueContinue reading “Which way will we choose?”
Young pastors and worship leaders drawn back to the liturgies they once discarded
In today’s “On Faith…” February 28 column in the Champaign-Urbana, IL, News-Gazette, I report on a very interesting meeting attended in mid-February. What do you think? “Young pastors drawn back to the liturgies of the church”For the last year, I have been following an experimental Sunday evening service at theContinueContinue reading “Young pastors and worship leaders drawn back to the liturgies they once discarded”
Humility is the key to counting others better than yourself…
Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves… Philippians 2:3-4″Humility is so crucial to hearing and knowing people. And yet, how difficult is it to count others better than ourselves? Very hard, I think. I like the way Michelle Cushatt says it …Tough relationships bring us face-to-faceContinueContinue reading “Humility is the key to counting others better than yourself…”