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This week for his newsletter, Christianity Today editor at large Russell Moore argued the AI jobs shakeup may be good for us in at least one sense: The "uncertainty can help us shake off some assumptions that hurt us." |
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"We have thought of vocation as a definite thing. That mindset may even be behind a lot of the angst we have about discerning God’s will for a career," he wrote. "We think once it’s decided, then the map is set, and now we just set out on it. Of course, that was never really true. Vocations never go the way we plan." |
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"The unpredictability was always there. Now it’s just recognizable and undisguised," he continued. "You can’t predict with certainty what jobs the world will need in ten years—and you certainly can’t find one and freeze it in place. But the world will still need wisdom and integrity and creativity and care." |
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| PAID CONTENT FOR COMPASSION INTERNATIONAL |
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David and Alex have always been dreamers. As brothers growing up in Esmaraldas, Ecuador, they fantasized about becoming professional soccer players—but the challenges of poverty stood in their way. The…
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On this week’s episode of The Just Life, Boyce Watkins explores how freedom isn’t just the absence of chains but the presence of conditions in which all people can have ownership in their work and businesses.
"If you really want to understand power in America, you can’t understand power in America unless you understand how money flows in America." | Listen here. |
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Bonnie Kristian, deputy editor: Reason magazine recently published a former police officer’s assessment of the use of force he’s seeing from federal immigration agents that I found well-informed and helpful in thinking about the shocking videos we’ve seen from Minnesota.
Kara Bettis Carvalho, senior features editor: I’ve been utilizing these compostable bags as a move away from plastics.
Elise Brandon, copy editor: This 40-day Lent devotional From the Grave, compiled from A. W. Tozer’s writings and sermons. |
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Allen Levi’s friends wouldn’t let him leave his novel in a drawer collecting dust. After having the idea for Theo of Golden, Levi wanted to see if he had the…
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Tonight, my church will have its first Ash Wednesday service. It’s a nondenominational evangelical church that meets in a high school in the heart of Hollywood, and after 20 years…
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When frontier evangelist "Raccoon" John Smith shared his testimony for the first time, he was nervous. In the early 1800s, he recounted his experience in typical fashion: He had been…
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I teach an undergraduate course called Worship and the Arts during the spring and summer terms. Most of my students in that class aren’t studying theology or religion—the course satisfies…
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When Jesus taught, he used parables. The kingdom of God is like yeast, a net, a pearl. Then and today, to grasp wisdom and spiritual insight, we need the concrete. We need stories. In this issue of Christianity Today, we focus on testimony—the stories we tell, hear, and proclaim about God’s redemptive work in the world. Testimony is a personal application of the Good News. You’ll read Marvin Olasky’s testimony from Communism to Christ, Jen Wilkin’s call to biblical literacy, and a profile on the friendship between theologian Miroslav Volf and poet Christian Wiman. In an essay on pickleball, David Zahl reminds us that play is also a testament to God’s grace. As you read, we hope you’ll apply the truths of the gospel in your own life, church, and neighborhood. May your life be a testimony to the reality of God’s kingdom. |
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