How would we live differently if we knew it was tomorrow?
While we don’t know the day or hour of Jesus’ return, we can discern the signs that it is very near. Let’s all live in light of this reality.
The Christian Post
Skip to main contentWhile we don’t know the day or hour of Jesus’ return, we can discern the signs that it is very near. Let’s all live in light of this reality.
At least 53 people are dead and over 270 buildings have been destroyed due to the wildfires afflicting the Hawaiian island of Maui, making it one of the deadliest fires in the United States in years.
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are yet to be revealed, but the three riders of political disaster are already before us as the pace picks up for the 2024 election. There are and will be others, but these are the ones now kicking up the most dust. God help us.
Events that occurred this week in Christian history include the first publishing of the Auburn Affirmation, the death of a notable hymnwriter in a major train accident, and Mars Hill’s final service.
Hurricane Ian will have destroyed as much as $50 billion, one of the most expensive in history, and the media tends to blame climate change. But the real culprit is the U.S. government.
When rain waters that seemed heavier than usual began to fall in eastern Kentucky roughly two weeks ago, Pastor Brad Stevens of the Church of God Worship Center in Clay County said he wasn’t afraid.
The media has largely moved on from the Afghanistan debacle, and many are all too eager to sweep the consequences of President Biden’s botched withdrawal under the rug. Yet, the repercussions will last lifetimes.