Isaiah 58
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“Search the scriptures daily and see whether these things are so.” — Acts 17:11

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Scripture

And the brethren immediately sent away Paul and Silas by night unto Berea: who coming thither went into the synagogue of the Jews. These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.

What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside?

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.

For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.

For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

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Latest Articles

Who Decides What’s a Religion? A History of the Government Trying to Answer a Question It Has No Business Asking
Jun 8, 2026

Two centuries of Supreme Court cases, IRS rulings, and congressional statutes have built an elaborate legal framework for defining religion.

Two centuries of Supreme Court cases, IRS rulings, and congressional statutes have built an elaborate legal framework for defining religion. The through-line is consistent: the government can ask if you’re sincere, but it cannot tell you whether your faith is real.

Here is the foundational paradox of American religious liberty: the First Amendment forbids the government from establishing religion, but to protect religion, courts and agencies have to know what counts as religion in the first place. Every attempt to draw that line creates the very entanglement the clause was designed to prevent.

Legal scholars have acknowledged the impossibility openly. Any definition that focuses on the particular characteristics of religious practice is “destined to fail” because definitions establish what religion is and therefore dictate what a religion must be — thereby contradicting the idea of freedom to practice whatever faith a person feels compelled to observe. Many scholars believe a government definition of religion is “contrary to the entire concept of religious liberty” and will only “create stagnancy by restricting the present and future growth of religion.”

Nobody Owns “Christian”
Jun 8, 2026

The Pentagon just decided the 17-million-member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn’t qualify as Christian.

The Pentagon just decided the 17-million-member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn’t qualify as Christian. There’s just one problem: the government has absolutely no business making that call.

“Christian” is not a trademark. It is not a licensed designation. No federal agency holds the registration. No act of Congress defines its membership criteria. The word has been in continuous dispute — theological, cultural, political — for literally two millennia, and the ink dried on the First Amendment more than two centuries before any Pentagon bureaucrat decided to sort service members into a government-approved list of who counts and who doesn’t.

And yet, here we are.

My Needs are Down Here
Jun 8, 2026

A challenge to pastors and church leaders on evangelism, embodied love, and the difference between strategy and faith

There is a moment in James 2 that should stop every pastor cold.

“If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,’ but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit?”

James is not describing a cruel person. He is describing a religious one. Someone who uses the right words, offers a genuine-sounding blessing, and walks away having done nothing. And James’s verdict is devastating: that faith is dead.

Karen Bass and the Question Authority Can’t Escape
Jun 6, 2026

A biblical framework applied to a complicated record

Every person who holds power stands under the same evaluation:

Am I using this authority to protect the vulnerable, or to protect myself?

That question — drawn from a recent piece on what authority is actually for — is more uncomfortable than any policy debate. It cannot be answered by citing accomplishments. It cannot be hidden inside good intentions. It is answered in behavior. And it is measured not by the condition of the powerful, but by the condition of the person standing beneath them.

What Is Spencer Pratt’s Authority Doing?
Jun 6, 2026

Applying the test from “What Is Authority For?”

A strange thing happened recently.

A former reality television villain found himself being discussed as a serious candidate for public office.

Predictably, much of the conversation focused on who Spencer Pratt used to be. The manipulator from The Hills. The tabloid celebrity. The professional attention-seeker.

A Friend Needs Help
Jun 6, 2026

One of the reasons I write books is because I believe money is a tool.

One of the reasons I write books is because I believe money is a tool.

Not a scorecard. Not a measure of worth. Not something to be accumulated indefinitely while people around us struggle.

A tool.

The Cowardly Shepherds
Jun 5, 2026

When Pastors Call “Patience” What God Calls Cowardice

It is Pride Month. Somewhere this June, a sixteen-year-old is sitting in a pew listening to adults debate whether she deserves to exist openly in public life. She is hearing from legislators, activists, pundits, and neighbors. The one voice she needs most is her pastor’s. And too often, that voice says nothing.

This piece is for her. And for everyone who has sat in that silence and wondered if they were wrong to expect more.

A recent Christianity Today post argued that the church’s rush to issue statements on every controversy is a sign of unfaithfulness. “Urgency is not faithfulness,” it declared. The piece invoked the image of Jesus spending 30 years in obscurity before speaking a single public word — suggesting pastors might do well to follow suit.

Pride 2026: Not For You to Judge
Pride 2026: Not For You to Judge
Jun 5, 2026

“Not For You To Judge”

“Not For You To Judge”

[Verse 1]

You come with your scripture, your stones already thrown
Like the rainbow that hung there was yours and yours alone
It was a promise, not a weapon, not a word meant for your war
So tell me who made you the keeper of that door

What “God Has a Plan” Gets Wrong: Suffering, Structural Sin, and the Persistent Widow
Jun 5, 2026

A theological reckoning with how we talk about pain, poverty, and charity

There is a phrase that circulates through Christian communities like a well-worn coin, passed from hand to hand until its edges have gone smooth: God has a plan.

It gets said at funerals. At hospital bedsides. In the awkward silence after someone shares news that has no good response. It is meant as comfort, and the people who say it usually mean it that way.

But ask the parent whose child just died whether it helped, and you will often get a look — the one that says I know you’re trying, but please stop.

The Flywheel: What Men’s Suicide Tells Us About Patriarchy, Economics, and the Work Only Men Can Do
Jun 4, 2026

Published for Men’s Mental Health Month — June 2026

There is a statistic that stops most people cold when they first encounter it.

In the United States, men die by suicide at nearly four times the rate of women. In the UK, suicide is the single biggest killer of men under 45. Globally, in every country on earth without exception, men die by suicide more than women.

And yet women attempt suicide at roughly three times the rate of men. Women experience suicidal ideation more often. Women are diagnosed with depression at twice the rate. Women are, by almost every measure of mental suffering short of death, in more distress.

The Mechanism: How Ordinary Evangelical Churches Produce Estrangement
Jun 4, 2026

It doesn’t require a theocrat. It just requires a Sunday.

Doug Wilson is easy to dismiss.

He’s the pastor in rural Idaho who wants to reinstate anti-sodomy laws and thinks women shouldn’t vote. He preaches at the Pentagon at Pete Hegseth’s invitation. He covered up child sexual abuse in his congregation for eight months. He is, by almost any measure, an extreme figure — and his extremism makes it easy for ordinary evangelical churches to point at him and say: that’s not us.

But the estrangement isn’t coming from Doug Wilson’s church alone.

Why Pride Exists
Jun 4, 2026

A history of what the celebration was always responding to

It’s June again, and somewhere right now a pastor is preaching about it.

Not celebrating it. Lamenting it. Naming it as evidence of cultural decay, moral confusion, spiritual rebellion. The rainbow flags outside the coffee shop, the parade downtown, the month-long visibility — all of it framed as an offense against the natural order, a symptom of a society that has lost its way.

And in the pews, LGBTQ+ teenagers are sitting very still, learning what their church thinks of people like them.

Ken Paxton Wins, and a Child Predator Walks Free
May 30, 2026

Ken Paxton won his primary. A child predator walked free the day before. And we’re supposed to move on.

There is a question that keeps surfacing, quiet and persistent, underneath all the political noise:

What is authority actually for?

Not in theory. Not in Sunday school. In practice — in the real world, where real people wield real power over other real people — what is it for?

“You Can’t Criticize Soldiers” Is How You Get the Worst People in Charge
May 25, 2026

On hierarchy as a shield, feedback as a necessity, and why pithy Reddit posts are a liability

There’s a story circulating right now about Graham Platner, a Maine Democratic Senate candidate and Marine combat veteran, who wrote on Reddit in 2019 that a wounded soldier “didn’t deserve to live.” The condemnations came fast. Robert O’Neill — the Navy SEAL credited with killing Osama bin Laden — called it “barbaric.” Susan Collins blasted it. Veterans lined up to say Platner is unfit for office.

They might be right. But the way the argument is being made carries its own risks — and tracing those risks is worth the effort.

In 2012, Pfc. Ted Daniels was caught on his own helmet cam being shot four times by Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. The footage went viral years later, garnering tens of millions of views. What the video looks like is a soldier making every tactical mistake in the book — running into the open, getting lit up, barely surviving.

Against You Only Have I Sinned
May 21, 2026

Psalm 51, David’s confession, and what gets erased when we read it wrong

There is a line in the Bible so frequently quoted in the aftermath of scandal, abuse, and institutional failure that it has almost become a kind of liturgical shield. It comes from Psalm 51, verse 4, traditionally attributed to King David after the prophet Nathan confronted him over his actions with Bathsheba and Uriah the Hittite:

“Against you, you only, have I sinned, and done what is evil in your sight.”

On its surface, this is one of the most beautiful lines in the Psalter — raw, undefended, spiritually honest. And it is. But over the last several decades, particularly in certain corners of American evangelical culture, this verse has been quietly repurposed. It has become a way to talk about sin that leaves human victims out of the room entirely.

Speed Running the Truth with AI
May 20, 2026

What the publishing industry’s AI panic is missing — and what the printing press already taught us

There’s a Substack article making the rounds in Christian publishing circles. An acquisitions editor describes receiving a book proposal she suspects was written by AI. She runs it through detectors. She feels disappointed, then suspicious, then angry. She compares the deceptive author to a fake chef serving microwave dinners.

It’s a well-written piece. The anger is real. The chef metaphor lands.

But it misses the most important thing happening right now. And what it misses reveals more about the publishing industry’s anxieties than it does about AI.

When Profit Decides What Exists
May 20, 2026

Pfizer had the data that could have changed medicine. The market said no. Now we’re doing it again — at scale.

In 1990, a team of Harvard researchers and a small biotech startup had human data proving that a molecule called GLP-1 could lower blood sugar in diabetics, suppress hunger, and slow digestion. It worked. The science was solid. The patent was held.

Their partner, Pfizer — one of the largest pharmaceutical companies on earth — reviewed the data and walked away. Not because the drug failed. Because, as Jeffrey Flier, former dean of Harvard Medical School and one of the researchers in the room, later wrote, Pfizer concluded that “nobody would ever want an injectable diabetes drug.” The market didn’t see the profit. So the program died.

The patents sat dormant. Novo Nordisk eventually picked them up in 1992, spent the next two decades engineering a stable, once-weekly injectable form of the molecule, and in 2017 released it as Ozempic. It is now one of the best-selling drugs in human history, generating tens of billions of dollars annually. Flier, now in his late 70s, finally wrote the whole story down because — as he put it — he didn’t want the history to die with him.

Christ Is King? The New Christian Right, Masculine Power, and the Return of Patriarchy
May 19, 2026

A new coalition is emerging on the American right.

It is younger than the Moral Majority. More online than the Tea Party. More intellectually ambitious than MAGA populism alone. And unlike the old evangelical establishment, it is increasingly comfortable speaking in the language of power, hierarchy, nationalism, and civilizational struggle.

One of the clearest recent examples appeared in a conference branded:

“Christ Is King — America After Trump”

If Our Rights Come From God, Why Is Trump Challenging Them?
May 19, 2026

The language of unalienable rights has always coexisted with power doing whatever it wants. That’s the point.

On Monday, MSNBC’s Katy Tur asked one of the more historically confused questions in recent cable news memory. Responding to a clip of House Speaker Mike Johnson at a Christian prayer rally on the National Mall, she turned to her panel and asked: “Is this him putting God over the Declaration of Independence?”

The backlash was swift and deserved. Johnson had not departed from the Declaration — he had paraphrased it. The second paragraph of the document that birthed this nation states plainly: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.” Tur, who holds a philosophy degree from UCSB, managed to mistake a quotation from the founding document for an attack on it.

But in the right’s gleeful dunking on Tur’s gaffe, conservatives sidestepped a question the Rededicate 250 rally itself raises — one that goes back to the founding, and one the founders themselves never cleanly resolved.

Et Tu, Jesus?
May 19, 2026

Angel Studios, The Chosen, and the Betrayal of the Teachings of Christ

There is a particular kind of disappointment reserved for things you once loved.

For millions of Christians — and many non-Christians drawn in by its humanity — The Chosen represented something genuinely rare: a portrayal of Jesus that felt earned. Not the waxy, stained-glass Christ of religious obligation. Not the culture-war mascot of American evangelical politics. A Jesus who wept. Who laughed at dinner. Who sat with the broken and the excluded and treated them like they mattered.

Then came Rededicate 250.