Check out

A Prayer For Mental Health
Based on Psalm 23.

Seven Habits of Outwardly Focused Churches
Thom Rainer challenges increasingly inward-looking churches to look outward and highlights how other churches do this.

Fasting From Technology
Thomas Kidd has some good ideas here about how to regularly fast from technology and why.

Can You Stop Your Kids Running Away From God After Graduation?
Erik Raymond says “Yes!” and supplies 11 helps.

Christian Death: Mourn Or Celebrate?
Jason Helopoulos: “Christians need a good theology of Christian death. It matters. Should we rejoice or weep when a brother or sister in Christ dies? Is a Christian funeral service a celebration or time for mourning? A right understanding of how to consider a Christian’s death will stymie the two extremes of merely rejoicing or merely grieving.”

You’re Doing Twitter Wrong


Top 10 Christian Leadership Books

As I’m often asked for book recommendations on various subjects, I decided to put together an online list of my top ten books in various categories. Basically, if I was only allowed 10 books in my library on that subject, these are the ten I would choose. Previous posts include:

A week or so ago, I listed the Top 10 on Leadership. These looked at the topic of leadership in general and were not written from an overtly Christian perspective. Today I’m listing the Top 10 Books on Christian Leadership, most of which I use in the Leadership Course I teach at Puritan Reformed SeminaryA future list will look at books specifically for pastoral ministry. You may also want to see the leadership resources here:

After this Top 10 list you’ll find a poll where you can cast three votes for your favorite books and help others choose the best books on the subject. Click on “View Results” to see what books are most popular.

You can also add any book not on the list by writing the title in “Other” or in the Comments  I’ll add these to the end of the post under “Reader Suggestions.”

Top 10 Christian Leadership Books

1. Conviction to Lead, The: 25 Principles for Leadership That Matters by Al Mohler

Al Mohler in his inimitable swashbuckling style leads us deep into the heart of the leader to examine and establish his basic convictions from which everything else flows.

2. The Shepherd Leader by Timothy Wittmer

A theological and practical exploration of the primary biblical model of leadership – shepherding. If you want to bless your pastor and elders, buy them this book.

3. Spiritual Leadership by J. Oswald Sanders

Definitely the most “spiritual” of the books on the list with a constant emphasis on the inner life of the leader. It’s also one of the most comprehensive books with 22 short chapters covering a wide range of leadership issues.

4. What’s Best Next by Matt Perman

A unique book in that it looks at productivity, time management, workflow, and vocation from the Christian perspective of good works for the glory of God.

5. The Book on Leadership by John Macarthur

A good basic textbook that is ideal for those just starting out on pastoral ministry and who are looking for a biblical basis for their calling and practice. Based largely on the life of the Apostle Paul with exegesis of numerous passages from Acts and the Epistles.

6. Leadership Handbook of Management and Administration

It’s a pity this book is only available for the Kindle, although you can still pick up used copies. It’s a unique kind of reference manual for the day to day administration involved in running a church. Multiple contributors with a high quality of content throughout.

7. You Lift Me Up: Overcoming Ministry Challenges by Al Martin

This book is Al Martin at his best, as he identifies three ministry challenges – ministerial backsliding, ministerial burnout, and credibility washout – and proposes various preventative and curative measures.

8. Spurgeon on Leadership by Larry J. Michael

A distillation of Spurgeon’s teaching on leadership as well as many biographical sections demonstrating how Spurgeon put his principles into practice.

9. The Steward Leader by R. Scott Rodin

Scott Rodin recovers one of the lost models of biblical leadership. He wants to instill stewardship as a mindset, as a worldview, but has many good sections on how this works out practically too.

10. Biblical Eldership by Alexander Strauch,

An outstanding book that has revolutionized the way many churches are run by demonstrating from the Bible the necessity of governance by a plurality of elders. Explains innumerable Bible texts on leadership.

Honorable Mentions

You need to read some of these with more discernment than the Top 10.

The Mentor Leader by Tony Dungy.

The Cross and Christian Ministry: Leadership Lessons From 1 Corinthians by Don Carson.

The Making of a Christian Leader by Ted Engstrom.

Building Leaders by Aubrey Malphurs.

Spiritual Leadership: Moving People on to God’s Agenda by Henry and Richard Blackaby.

Lead Like Jesus by Ken Blanchard and Phil Hodges.

Now you decide, what are your favorites? You can cast three votes and write a book in “Other” if it’s not on the list and I’ll add it to Reader Suggestions below. Click on “View Results” to see voting results.

Reader Suggestions

The Heart of a Servant Leader: Letters from Jack Miller

Christian Reflections on The Leadership Challenge


Check out

Is College Worth It? Clearly, New Data Say
“Americans with four-year college degrees made 98 percent more an hour on average in 2013 than people without a degree. That’s up from 89 percent five years earlier, 85 percent a decade earlier and 64 percent in the early 1980s.”

Were Christians Right About Gay Marriage All Along
Offensive picture at the top of this article and pretty offensive content too, but if you want to know what gay marriage advocates want next, this article will forewarn and forearm you.

Race, Diversity And God’s Glory: A Conversation with Trillia Newbell
And in a related post, Voddie Baucham discusses whether churches should make diversity their highest goal.

Catholic Ob/Gyns: Leave Britain Or Else
The culture of death and religious intolerance progresses in Britain.

The Key Points In Mary Meeker’s Annual (And Prophetic) Internet Trends Presentation
164 info-packed slides.

Man Drives Over a Million Miles To Save 2000 Dogs
Amazing, but I know of someone else who travelled far further to save millions of dying people from hell.


My Vision For Christian Education

With two sons graduating from High School in the next couple of weeks – one from a Christian school and one from a “virtual” school – I’ve been thinking a lot about my God-given responsibility as a father to ensure that my children are educated in “the training and admonition of the Lord” (Eph. 6:4). I take that to mean that I am to teach and discipline each child just as Christ would, were he physically present to do so.

But what does that look like in practice? How does that principle help us choose the right place, curriculum, and personnel for teaching our children?

As someone who was raised entirely in the public school system and who has subsequently used homeschooling, homeschooling cooperatives, online school, and a little bit of Christian school in my kids’ education so far, here’s my “vision” of what an ideal Christian education would look like. I know I’ll never find this perfectly in this world, but I’m looking for as much of this as I can in whatever method, or combination of methods, I choose.

1. The Bible is the foundation
The foundation of all education must be the Bible, not tradition, personal preferences, or majority opinion.

But what does that mean?

It means that the Bible is the content of some of the teaching, is appropriately referred to in all subjects, and is the measure of all that is taught. In other words, nothing contradicts the Bible and the Bible is positively taught.

2. The Gospel (not law) is central
We want our children taught God’s law, what’s right and wrong. We want them taught morals and manners. But do’s and don’ts must never be the priority. The Gospel must be the priority – what Christ has DONE. This means that:

  • The Gospel is taught throughout the curriculum.
  • The Gospel is believed, publicly professed, and lived out by the teachers.
  • The Gospel is applied in the administration, and especially in the discipline, of the school.
  • The Gospel is offered, indeed pressed upon the children at suitable times.

Whatever else our kids get from their education, they must get that the Gospel is the most important thing in all the world, far more important than good grades, good reports, or good morals. Whatever else they know, they have to know that they must be born again, that a Christian education does not make them Christians.

3. A balanced view of the world
We want our children warned against the dangers of worldliness. And that’s not so much about externals such as hair length, skirt tightness, and designer logos. It’s the far more subtle, dangerous, and largely hidden worldliness of the heart – individualism, materialism, pride, idolatry, vanity, haughtiness, etc, that we want to focus on.

We also want our children prepared for the world by equipping them with knowledge of what they will face in the world and how to combat it with biblical truth. We don’t want our children totally sheltered from the world and unprepared for going out into it. They must know and understand the world’s -ologies and -isms, in order to critique, combat, and replace them with the Bible’s worldview.

And, finally, we want our children to embrace and celebrate God’s work in the world. We don’t want them viewing this world as a completely terrible place full of nothing but disasters, death, and dangers. No, we want them to see God’s common grace at work in multiple places, creating much that is good and praiseworthy. This includes celebrating the unique strengths and abilities of the different races, ethnicities, cultures, and nations.

4. A holistic view of human flourishing
We don’t want to produce a bunch of geeks who have no heart for others and are of no practical use to anyone. Neither do we want to just produce a bunch of kids who can do lots of arts and crafts but don’t know how to think. We want a balanced view of human flourishing that seeks to multiply God’s gifts in the head, the heart, and the hands.

We want educators who value the intellect, but who equally value manual skills, and who want their pupils to cultivate caring and compassion for others. All these intellectual, practical, and relational gifts should be equally celebrated and cultivated, so that no kid feels inferior or neglected because they are not the kindergarten valedictorian.

That’s my vision for Christian education. What’s yours?


Check out

What Are We Teaching Our Daughters?
Rebecca Vandoodewaard: “A woman who is skilled in every domestic art is of little Kingdom use unless she also thinks biblically, discerns wisely, understands the times, and can serve her family and church with these vital gifts as best she can.”

Under The Hood Of Sermon Making
That’s not the title Dan gave it, but it’s exactly what he allows us see as he explains the reasoning process behind the multitude of decisions that have to be made when preparing a sermon.

There’s Sin And There Are “Sins”
Are only some sins “going-to-hell” sins? ON the same subject, here’s Nick Batzig on how God works even our sins together for the believer’s good.

Five Benefits of Corporate Worship
Here are five such “graces and benefits” that we experience uniquely in the context of corporate worship.

On Controversy
John Newton’s letter to a minister who was about to enter into controversy with another minister.

Hidden Miracles Of The Natural World


7 Toxic Ideas Polluting Your Mind

The worst kind of poison is the kind that poisons you without you realizing it. There’s no bitter taste, no pain, no sudden weakness, nothing to alarm; yet, the poison is slowly and steadily doing its deadly work.

In such a dangerous condition, our only hope is some kind of test that shows what is undetectable to normal human senses, maybe a scan of sorts that shows up the extent of the poison in our systems. Only then can the antidote be found, prescribed, and taken.

Although the vast majority of Christians don’t realize it, we are being slowly yet steadily poisoned by virtually undetectable toxins. No, this isn’t about chemicals or biological agents; it’s ideas, worldviews, philosophies, and ideologies that we are unknowingly absorbing into our systems every day of life, and that are eating away at the vitals of our spiritual vitality.

Thankfully, Pastor and Professor Anthony Selvaggio has provided a scan to help us see the toxins and the damage they are doing. in 7 Toxic Ideas Polluting Your Mind, he shines biblical light on seven wrong and sinful ideas or ideologies that have subtly infiltrated into our thinking patterns wreaking havoc on our spirituality. He covers:

1. Technopoly: The iPod Nation
2. Neophilia: History is Bunk
3. Egalitarianism: We’re all in Charge
4. Individualism: Every Man is an Island
5. Materialism: All That Matters is Matter
6. Consumerism: Shop Till You Drop
7. Relativism: What is Truth?

Even more thankfully, Selvaggio also provides antidotes to these terrible toxins, biblical truths with which to attack these infiltrators and drive them out of our minds and heart, with #1 and #4 being both especially convicting and especially converting for me.

I predict that as you read you will be stunned to discover how some of these viruses have wormed their way into your thinking and you’ll be grateful to Selvaggio for helping you not only to identify them but also to train you with biblical strategies to combat and defeat them.

It’s a book that stirs us out of our passivity and onto the offensive “to pick up intellectual arms and join the battle for the mind.” It’s a call to battle conformity to the world, but not the kind of worldliness that focuses merely on external behavior; rather it’s a summons to fight against thinking like the world.

Although this is a book that everyone can benefit from (and I certainly did), its popular style, contemporary references, and brevity make it especially helpful for High School and College age readers. It would be ideal for Church Youth Groups and for High School Apologetics courses. Also, great Sunday afternoon reading for teenagers.