Spring 2011 Issue
World Evangelism
The view from the Lausanne Congress in Cape Town.
Also Inside:
- Students Writing Books with Profs
- Diversity Means Justice at Trinity Law School
- Why We Need the Church and a Plan at Life’s End
Rob Moll, Editor | Subscribe
Whether death comes slowly or without warning, it is best to be prepared.
Trinity Law School students from many backgrounds and ethnicities seek a Christian response to injustice.
by Greg Leeper Believing that “the church in North America is in serious trouble,” authors Kent Carlson (BA ’79, MA ’82,
Inspired to attend Trinity because of John Woodbridge (MDiv ’71), I had no idea I would co-author a book with
John Woodbridge on D.A. Carson’s gifts to the evangelical world.
The view from the Lausanne Congress in Cape Town.
Also Inside:
An unregistered church sees an opportunity to demonstrate the gospel.
Much of the fascination Protestants have with other Christian traditions is often directed toward Catholicism, as a former president of
Challenged by the last evil, the church is where we our fundamental beliefs are restored. By Rob Moll In his
by Greg Leeper Believing that “the church in North America is in serious trouble,” authors Kent Carlson (BA ’79, MA ’82,
My parents’ first visit to Trinity and the midwest!
Whether death comes slowly or without warning, it is best to be prepared.
We’re always in need of taking a break from something in order to prune our relationships.
Trinity Law School students from many backgrounds and ethnicities seek a Christian response to injustice.
Inspired to attend Trinity because of John Woodbridge (MDiv ’71), I had no idea I would co-author a book with
The world has changed dramatically since the first Lausanne Congress in 1974. Are evangelicals adapting to the current challenges?
The US as a foreign mission field.