AI Jesus

As daily news stories will attest, AI (artificial intelligence) can now be used to draft essays, complete exams, solve equations, and even converse with the lonely. But an AI Jesus? Beware ... it's here: Developers of the Twitch stream ask_jesus have created an interactive AI-generated version of Jesus that provides 24/7 Q&A programmed with teachings from the New Testament Gospels.

Read More
Choosing God First

My Utmost for His Highest is a daily Christian devotional that compiles the teachings and preaching of Oswald Chambers to the soldiers and students he mentored over the years. Chambers' wife Gertrude Hobbs published the book in 1917 shortly after Chambers' untimely death, compiling the daily devotions from her pages of shorthand notes. 

Read More
Turning Grief into Glory

For Shamayim Harris, the past 16 years have been a journey of overwhelming loss: In 2007, Harris' two-year-old son Jakobi was killed in a hit-and-run accident in Highland Park, a suburb of Detroit. In 2021, Harris' 23-year-old son Chinyelu was fatally shot while doing a neighborhood watch.

Read More
Exploring Psyche

As you ponder summer projects, consider this one: NASA's Psyche mission was originally expected to lift off in 2022. But the two-month launch window opened and closed last fall before the flight software was ready. Then COVID reverberations and accompanying staffing issues delayed the mission further.

Read More
It's Always the Right Time To Do Something for the First Time

A friend of mine ran for a local political position for the first time this spring. She lost by a slim margin, but she counted the experience a win. A coworker joined a new leadership team that required an all-day retreat last month, pressing her outside of her comfort zone. She reluctantly cleared her calendar to attend, and she returned to the office excited about new possibilities.

Read More
Pressing On Toward the Goal

For most of us, museums are sanctuaries of the past -- beautiful spaces where we can peruse art and artifacts of those who have come before us, seeking to understand ourselves a little better in the process. But what about museums of the future?

Read More
Embracing the Accidental

Did you know that one of the most iconic movie lines of all time was actually an accident that emerged from an argument? Picture Arnold Schwarzennegger in his black leather jacket, dark sunglasses, and fierce demeanor in the 1984 science fiction movie The Terminator: And the line that cemented his rise to fame? "I'll be back."

Read More
Mastering Fear

Faith Dickey is a professional slackliner. Slacklining is an umbrella term for walking on different variations of a flat, woven band suspended off the ground. What Dickey is known for, however, pushes slacklining high into the sky, often into the alps of France, and has occasionally involved high heels.

Read More
Stress & Jesus

Authors Roy Oswald and Arland Jacobson define "stress resilience" as our ability to face challenging and even traumatic situations without breaking down emotionally or losing our ability to respond in a calm, measured manner. And they point to our perfect example of a traumatic life lived with great self-control, tranquility, and peace: Jesus Christ.

Read More
Expecting the Unexpected

When Laura Young paid $34.99 for a white marble bust at a Goodwill in Austin, Texas, several years ago, she was pleased with her discovery: "I was just looking for anything that looked interesting," she said. She never would have guessed that her 52-pound living room decor is actually a 2,000-year-old sculpture of the ancient Roman military leader Sextus Pompey.

Read More
The Fleeting Moment

When she was only 16 years old, American poet Emily Dickinson wrote the following in a letter to her friend Abiah Root: "Let us strive together to part with time more reluctantly, to watch the pinions of the fleeting moment until they are dim in the distance & the new coming moment claims our attention."

Read More
From Teddy Bears to Turtles

Most of us avoid conflict -- at least on some level -- because the experience can prove uncomfortable, stressful, and even disorienting. But why is resolving conflicts such a struggle? If God calls us to love others as we love ourselves, why can't we all live joyfully -- supporting one another and sacrificing our own needs when appropriate? 

Read More
Holy Week

As we move through Holy Week -- the week between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday as Jesus journeyed his final days to the cross-- how will you prepare your heart for the most important celebration on our Christian calendar: Easter morning?

Read More
The Ultimate Center

Luci Shaw is a poet and essayist born in London, England, in 1928 who now lives in Bellingham, Washington, with her husband. Her 2020 poetry collection The Generosity is a delightful glimpse of God's hand across our lives -- from the moss of Orcas Island to the secret sounds of a cloudy day. As we anticipate Holy Week next week, listen to the ponderings of Shaw's poem "The 'O' in Hope":

Read More
Flight of the Bumblebee

In a new study conducted at Queen Mary University of London and published in PLOS Biology, researchers have discovered that bumblebees watch and learn from one another, demonstrating a level of social learning that scientists have not previously seen among insects.

Read More
Spitfire

When Linda Williams was diagnosed with terminal cancer a year ago, she started organizing a dance party. Williams, who is 76 and lives in High Wycombe, England, says she can't stand funerals: "I've never been to a good funeral," she said. "They're miserable things, so I decided I wanted a celebration of my life." 

Read More
A Symbol of Resilience

In just over a decade, Frida located the bodies of 43 people and rescued a dozen people. She began her career in 2010 when a massive earthquake hit Haiti and she found 12 people alive beneath the rubble. In 2017, she helped rescue survivors from a landslide in Ecuador. Several months later, she became a social media star and national icon when she assisted rescuers after the Mexico City earthquake that killed hundreds.

Read More