Community is revolutionary. When we bring it to a rolling boil, lives change and plans foment that ripple around the world. But it’s hard to cook up community from scratch in middle-class North America. Some days, just getting to know the neighbors on your street can feel like trying to get the wave going at a football game while everybody stares at you from their seats. Still, we go on believing that God made people—all of us, no matter your Myers-Briggs profile type—to need other people. So we need to figure out how to break our ruts of commuting, watching Hulu, and consuming Hot Pockets alone. And we couldn’t have better guides on how to do this than Adam and Christine Jeske.
Drawing the line between discernment and discretion.
The night before I left college, I got home late. There, at my door, I…
Long gone are the days of the junior high lunchroom—where kids seemed to be divided…
When Nathan was 13, he tried out for the middle school boy’s basketball team. At…
Gen Z likes cities, and we like to move. There’s a lot about this which…
In his classic work Life Together, Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote, “The person who loves their dream…
Learn how to make the leap from living in seclusion to engaging in community with your neighbors.
We know we’re supposed to love our neighbors, but our company also shapes our identity—for better or for worse. So where do we draw the line?
Have you noticed the increase in cliche sayings such as, “Your vibe attracts your tribe”,…