Where can outcasts find a home, if not in the church? The Northern Lighthouse in Lincoln, Neb., has become that home for many.
Our Shared Ministry
Our Shared Ministry is a place to hear, discuss, and celebrate the ministry that we, as the Christian Reformed Church, are involved in across North America and around the world.
Dear Matt and Josh,
Thank you for inviting me to dinner.A couple living in the village of Mambu, Cameroon, left home one morning before sunrise.
Some 400 students from across North America will come to Calvin College later this month to learn about international development and to
Seventy children were decorating crosses on the last day of a 10-day gospel outreach program in Soroti, Uganda, when a wild-eyed man appe
What is the Christian church like in the Middle East today? How does it relate to Middle Eastern immigrant churches in North America?
Not far from my home is a large billboard showing the face of a man with a bright shiny smile.
The money raised by the Sea to Sea 2008 Bike Tour will support the fight against global poverty.
Gayle Harrison
I am committed to ride in the Sea to Sea 2008 Bike Tour to break some stereotypes.
Presented by the Christian Reformed Church, Sea to Sea 2008 is a binational cross-continental cycling trek beginning June 28 in Seattle,
Rev.
Mentioning the seven deadly sins brings a lot to mind—just ask a teenager.
What happens when a highly educated and influential Muslim hears the gospel and is given the opportunity to respond in secret via cell ph
The picture of John Calvin winking on the cover should be the giveaway: The Reformed Handbook sees things a little differently.
Calvin Theological Seminary recently received its largest single gift ever—more than $2 million—and it’s all going to s
It seemed like a painful ending.
As difficult as it may be to imagine, another year is rapidly coming to a close.
In his thirtieth letter to Rev. Jimmy Lin, 67-year-old “Mr.
A culture dating back six millennia. One-fifth of the world’s population. For much of its history, closed to outside influences.
Many of the residents of lower Manhattan in New York City are busy affluent urban professionals: stockbrokers, lawyers, and executives cl
On a sweltering Sunday in July, more than 21,000 people crowded into a soccer stadium in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo.
This has been one of my favorite classes by far at seminary, partly because it connected theory and theology with practice, and that&rsqu
Entering Aylmer, Ontario, is like going back in time.
I realize that in this column I’m a guest at your table, and I truly respect that relationship.