The Voyage of Life: Hope after Death
Death comes for us all. But the Christian perspective gives us hope despite this. After all, this world is not our home.
Death comes for us all. But the Christian perspective gives us hope despite this. After all, this world is not our home.
Is life a meaningless cycle of birth, growth, decay, and death? Or is there a purpose to life? We must find our hope in Jesus Christ, the Lord over space and time.
Every one of us experiences birth, growth, decay, and death, a pattern depicted in Thomas Cole’s Voyage of Life paintings. What can these paintings teach us about life right now and eternity?
You are not primarily a body. You are not primarily a soul. You are a person with both body and soul. Both are essential components of the human person.
What do we do when things are out of our control, when we face opposition from without or from within? We hope in Christ and rest in the promises of God.
Ken Boa discusses the firm and steady hope we have in Christ, especially in the face of the loss of loved ones.
Ken Boa’s 52 Greatest Stories of the Bible series continues with Genesis 12, in which we learn how God did the impossible through a “random nobody who lived in the middle of nowhere.”
Knowing God involves both the heart and the mind. The ancient practice of sacred reading involves a process of moving from the mind to the heart through reading, meditation, prayer, and contemplation. This is the ninth part of Ken Boa’s “Devotional Spirituality” series.
Dr. Boa discusses the role of angels in spiritual warfare.
Below are some Scriptures, plus links to other resources, that provide perspective and encouragement at times of loss. These verses are good texts for reading at funerals or at other times in the face of loss of various kinds. [divider style=”solid” color=”#cccccc” opacity=”1″ placement=”equal”] Watch a video of
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