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Featured image for “The Simplicity of God”
May 27, 2016
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Essays

The Simplicity of God

by Joshua Harris
…attributes we ascribe to him, we might consider the way in which the sixty-four squares comprising a chess board is related to the rules of chess. How might we reply, for example, if someone were to suggest that we follow all the rules of chess, but without a board? The answer, of course, would have to be something along the lines of “whatever your proposed game is, it’s not chess.” When we understand why it’s impossible to play chess without a c…
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Featured image for “Advent: The True Vine”
December 17, 2014
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Devotions

Advent: The True Vine

by Erin Olson
…ises, we receive reassurance and strength to face the days ahead. The True Vine provides what we need so we can display the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, and self-control. In this advent time, as we prepare to celebrate the coming of our Savior, let us draw nearer to the True Vine and in turn find ourselves bearing the Fruits of His Spirit….
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Featured image for “A Botanist’s Take on the Fruits of the Spirit”
January 8, 2019
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Essays

A Botanist’s Take on the Fruits of the Spirit

by Jeff Ploegstra
…e we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit. Let us not become conceited, provoking and envying each other.” Gray-Headed Coneflower (Ratibida pinnata) Perhaps the next time that you think about the fruit of the Spirit, you can imagine self-control as the hard shell of an acorn protecting the truth of Christ, or joy as the plumed fruit of an aster spreading the gospel of hope across the landscape. Perhaps each of the fruits picture…
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Featured image for “Why Does My Insurance Cost So Much?”
February 18, 2016
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Essays

Why Does My Insurance Cost So Much?

by Donald Roth
…er risk on one side will mean higher premiums on the other. Of course, the real world is more complicated than this explanation, but the essential principle holds. Just like the pool mentioned above, people don’t want to throw away money, so economic pressure keeps profit margins in insurance relatively low.1 At the same time, since it’s essential that the pool have enough money, insurance companies are very financially stable. Overall, while ther…
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Featured image for “Christians Just Wanna Have Fun”
August 1, 2016
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Essays

Christians Just Wanna Have Fun

by Donald Roth
…ey involve pursuing what we genuinely love. It’s far from the only emotion associated with enjoyment, but fun is the momentary high that comes with a dump of endorphins into your system at the crescendo of some enjoyable activity, and perhaps that’s why there’s some suspicion around it. Perhaps we worry that seeking fun too much makes us into fun-junkies, just chasing after our next high. That’s not all, though, if fun is the smoke rising up from…
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Featured image for “The Adjective Green”
September 15, 2021
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Essays

The Adjective Green

by Dave Schelhaas
…nnotations.   The King James version of the Bible uses the word green forty-four times—all positive usages and all but five in the Old Testament. One of my favorites is Song of Solomon 1:16: “Behold, thou art fair, my beloved, yea pleasant: also our bed is green.” What fruitfulness that one little word suggests.  The last reference to green in the King James is Revelation 9:4: “And it was commanded them  they should not hurt the grass of the earth…
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Featured image for “The Rhythm of Work and Fishing”
July 29, 2016
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Essays

The Rhythm of Work and Fishing

by Adam Adams
…ew pastimes, hobbies, and vacation as escape from work, we are missing the reality that work and play exist together and benefit each other. For me, fishing is not an escape from work, but a transition from one thing God has created me to do, to another thing God has created me to do. Each of these activities are necessary for me to lead a fulfilling life. A bad day fishing is better than a good day at work is simply not true. When I go fishing, I…
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Featured image for “What Time Is It?: A Review of <em> How to Inhabit Time </em>”
March 30, 2023
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Books

What Time Is It?: A Review of How to Inhabit Time

by April Fiet
…events becoming stale or overdone. The sacredness of these holy moments becomes real in an intimate and personal way every time they are observed. The book is divided into sections, each section begun by a reflection on the book of Ecclesiastes. My pastor’s heart enjoyed each of these reflections as a way of meditating on Scripture’s call to reflect on the value of time. Was the Teacher who wrote Ecclesiastes a pessimist who thought everything wa…
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Featured image for “Spirit/Body or Spirit-Body?”
February 27, 2017
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Devotions

Spirit/Body or Spirit-Body?

by Annie Sears
…he personal devotion, the coffee-time-Jesus-chat, and the sedentary-sitting-and-sermon-listening – there’s something to be said for engaging our physical body in the act of worship. The ancient Israelites understood this. While wandering towards Canaan, Israelites that wanted to speak intimately with God would venture far outside their tribe’s camp and enter the Tent of Meeting. When Moses would go to speak with God, the rest of the Israelite peop…
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Featured image for “Intentional Living”
April 15, 2016
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Essays

Intentional Living

by
…e are realizing that walking alongside someone in their life experiences is tremendously important in the building of a relationship. How does Christ address the tears of the world? He weeps. He weeps with us. An infinite God becomes our companion and embodies empathy in a way no normal human could. Who wouldn’t want to share the beauty of that relationship with someone else? Thank you Alex for reminding us of the importance of making disciples of…
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Featured image for “Summer: A Beautiful, Holy Mess”
May 4, 2015
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Essays

Summer: A Beautiful, Holy Mess

by Kayla Craig
…is wonderful. And you know what? It takes a village.” She redirects my two-year-old and I take a deep breath and in the chaos, I realize something. This is good. Here, in our small town grocery store, I’m experiencing something holy and true and real. When we find those opportunities to say yes to our children — to acknowledge them and enter into their little hearts and minds, we’re creating space for love to take root. Our littles might not reme…
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Featured image for “Viral Blessings”
July 21, 2020
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Essays

Viral Blessings

by John Visser
and what it has forgotten. Our world, or at least the U.S. and similar high-income countries, had become consumptive, individualistic, a bit frantic, and—frankly—quite arrogant. Oddly, what we didn’t seem to realize was how uniquely vulnerable this type of world is. We didn’t seem to understand that allowing our spending to gradually shift from things that address the needs of large numbers of people to spending largely focused on satisfying our o…
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Featured image for “Calling and Vocation and College”
October 26, 2016
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Essays

Calling and Vocation and College

by Harlan VanOort
…ted our culture, almost as much as the splitting of the atom or individual freedom. The professor introduced us to the big picture of complex circuitry, as well as the smallest capacitor. My mind was enlarged, and I would not recognize how it would help my vocation until much later. Consider the story of my dad. My father didn’t have a high school diploma. He was the oldest of seven. All of his siblings graduated from college. All of his brothers…
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Featured image for “Advent: High Priest”
December 21, 2014
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Devotions

Advent: High Priest

by Neal DeRoo
…fications, no special robes and ephods. God lived in the dirt and grime of real human living, becoming one of us. God became totally human in every way—and that human now lives forever in God’s presence. He has sent that presence to dwell among God’s people in the person of the Holy Spirit, and promises that we will all live in God’s presence one day. We will live in that presence, not by somehow rising up—through right religious rituals, doctrine…
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Featured image for “Models of the Interaction of Science and Religion”
June 24, 2015
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Essays

Models of the Interaction of Science and Religion

by Tony Jelsma
…old Ludwig Looking forward to the rest of the series. Neal DeRoo Glad you liked this one, Harold. The other two in the series are already posted. Here is the third one: http://inallthings.org/a-reformed-approach-to-the-interactions-of-science-and-religion-contd/. there is a link to the second one at the top, if you click on where it says “this is number 3 of 3 in the series…”. I hope you enjoy the rest….
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June 24, 2015
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Concordist

by
…Concordist approaches see events in Scripture as referring to real events, even if some freedom of interpretation is allowed. Non-concordist approaches see these passages as using phenomenological language or as teaching theological lessons without referring to actual events….
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Featured image for “God Doesn’t Leave”
July 3, 2017
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Devotions

God Doesn’t Leave

by Katlyn DeVries
…Daily Scripture Texts Psalm 119:161-168 1 Kings 21:1-16 1 Thessalonians 4:9-12 As I read the Old Testament text from 1 Kings today, I am struck by the absurd sequence of events that unfolds. The scene opens with King Ahab looking out past his property and noticing Naboth’s vineyard next door. Thinking it would make a nice vegetable garden, he asks Naboth to exchange his land for a different vineyard—an even better vineyard—or for the vineyard’s va…
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Featured image for “Navigating Transgender: A Review of <em> Understanding Transgender Identities</em>”
October 27, 2022
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Books

Navigating Transgender: A Review of Understanding Transgender Identities

by Joel Kok
…between Strachan and Sabia-Tanis, readers can ask: Does Strachan view Sabia-Tanis as “hell-bound”? Does Sabia-Tanis view Strachan’s traditional views regarding gender as equivalent to racist and sexist views? In response to such questions, readers can also seek additional engagement in the essays by Mark Yarhouse and Julia Sadusky, who together emphasize “The Complexities of Gender Identity,” and Megan K. DeFranza, who seeks to offer “Good News fo…
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Featured image for “Top 10 Most Read iAt Articles in 2015”
December 31, 2015
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Culture
Spotlights

Top 10 Most Read iAt Articles in 2015

by Liz Moss
…hiding amongst them. The Vanishing (Reformed) Youth In May when the Pew Research Center released some of the first data from its 2014 research on the religious affiliations of the populace of the United States, Donald Roth pointed out some of the interesting tidbits floating in the data, as well as some concerning trends. God Loves Sex and Sexuality “For a church that talks a lot about God’s will for sex, we seem to have very few conversations ab…
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Featured image for “The Liturgy of Sleep”
May 31, 2018
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Essays

The Liturgy of Sleep

by Dawn Berkelaar
…our pillow. Tish Harrison Warren, “Worship in the Everyday: An Interview with Tish Harrison Warren.” http://thewell.intervarsity.org/voices/worship-everyday-interview-tish-harrison-warren ↩ Tish Harrison Warren, The Liturgy of the Ordinary. ↩ p. 158, 161. ↩ Psalm 121:4. ↩…
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Featured image for “What’s in a Name?”
August 11, 2015
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Essays

What’s in a Name?

by Sarah Roth
…n” engraved on our entry signs? Does it really make a difference in our day-to-day operations? Does being a Christian facility actually affect how we maintain the landscaping or what housekeeping procedures we implement? Well, yes, it does. Sure, we’re not searching Scripture for a verse about Bingo prize guidelines or dining room menu ideas. But the decision to publicly bear the name of Christ does create a different level of accountability and i…
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Featured image for “Opening Eyes for the Deaf and Ears for the Blind”
June 27, 2016
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Devotions

Opening Eyes for the Deaf and Ears for the Blind

by Ethan Brue
…k “who is this man”? The real miracle never occurs until eyes and ears are opened and we begin to know Jesus. Like post-resurrection Peter, we stop asking to walk on water and simply cry “It is the Lord!” while jumping in with our whole being…clothes and all. This is easier said than done. For while atoms, proteins, water, and bread all must follow, humans only follow when their eyes are opened so that they can see how much they are loved. When we…
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Featured image for “Our Favorite Podcasts from 2017”
December 15, 2017
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Culture

Our Favorite Podcasts from 2017

by Liz Moss
…ear? What podcasts would you recommend to the readers of iAt? Leave your recommendations in the comments. 99% Invisible–“all about the thought that goes into the things we don’t think about” Slate’s Culture Gabfest–Listen to Slate’s critics Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, and Julia Turner, plus their guests, discuss what’s happening in movies, books, TV, and more. Embedded–Host Kelly McEvers takes a story from the news and goes deep. Filmspotting–“…
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Featured image for “The Flag in the Corner”
July 4, 2018
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Essays

The Flag in the Corner

by Caleb Schut
…y to convince myself and the good people of Grace Chicago that a day of non-violence could be real, even on our streets. The stripes on the flag bend slightly, the stars are eyes watching over me. Preach on, good preacher. Someday, maybe, but not today. Each week when we gather for worship, we pledge our allegiance to another kingdom. But the flag in the corner stands watch. It reminds me, though it’s hard to admit, that I wouldn’t trade its secur…
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Featured image for “Lent: They Put the Cross on Him”
March 20, 2015
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Devotions

Lent: They Put the Cross on Him

by Teresa Ter Haar
…ead of the journey Jesus takes towards the hill. For a brief time, Simon shared the burden of the cross with Jesus. Perhaps Lent is the season for us to share the burden too. And in sharing the burden, to realize (maybe as Simon did) that Jesus was (and is) carrying the real burden for us the entire time. “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” Have mercy on us!…
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