Breakfast of Pastors: How God Feeds and Keeps Spiritual Leaders
David Mathis | How do you find your legs for life and leadership each day? God has given us a golden, well-worn, surprisingly ancient path for daily stability, clarity, and strength.

David Mathis | How do you find your legs for life and leadership each day? God has given us a golden, well-worn, surprisingly ancient path for daily stability, clarity, and strength.
Scott Hubbard | If dinosaurs could preach, what might they say? Trust the God of wisdom. Fear the God of power. Praise the God of wonders.
Greg Morse | Beards are no prerequisite for godly manhood. In days like ours, though, they can be a symbol for it.
Marshall Segal | Why might God give a man an ambition to lead, and the character to lead, and yet withhold certain opportunities to lead? Because unwanted waiting can be some of the best preparation for ministry.
David Mathis | The infamous “Billy Graham Rule” is not actually a rule, but a resolution — and just one of four that the evangelist made in 1948.
Jon Bloom | Not all divisions are created equal in the church. Some arise from the flesh. Some enter through differences in maturity. Others are necessary to distinguish the false from the real.
Marshall Segal | We will not feel the full weight of God’s mercy toward us if we downplay or ignore the fury of his justice.
Greg Morse | What person would not only submit to martyrdom, but would embrace it, relish it, and even eagerly long for it? Ignatius of Antioch.
David Mathis | Our God is not only great, but good. Not only big, but beautiful. Not only strong, but stunning. He is, in a word, majestic.
Scott Hubbard | The patience of God is not like our shallow, short-lived patience. It is deep and long, wide and high. And in the perfection of his patience, we find great hope.
Marshall Segal | Feeling angry over a spouse’s sin may not be wrong. But staying angry is.
Greg Morse | Too many men sit around and watch the world burn without stepping up to tell someone about Jesus.
Joe Rigney | How might we think in an orderly way about God’s attributes? Here’s often overlooked help from Jonathan Edwards.
Scott Hubbard | Even the most faithful Christians end some days deeply wishing we had walked more worthy of our God. How do we find rest when our conscience keeps us awake?
David Mathis | Our families, churches, and communities need leaders who have learned to keep their heads when others are losing theirs.
Marshall Segal | Few realities in human life are as captivating, fulfilling, and elusive as friendship.
Joe Rigney | If a Christian wants to join your baptist church but they tell you that they were baptized as a child, what do you do?
David Mathis | Many today may feel afresh that true unity is rare and precious. But do we know from where that kind of unity comes?
Greg Morse | The world, the devil, and your flesh will tell you there is surely an easier way to heaven than the narrow way, a more comfortable burden than the cross, and a more reasonable spirituality than self-denial requires.
Scott Hubbard | This world needs more people willing to look foolish in the eyes of the world so that more in the world might be saved.
Marshall Segal | Sometimes God allows conflict in a church so that the body might finally heal and be whole again.
Jon Bloom | As Christians, we can build unity, protect unity, and maintain unity because Christ has already made us one.
David Mathis | Faithful confessions, creeds, and commentaries provide crucial insights into Scripture. And they never replace the words of God.
Joe Rigney | Many of the most difficult decisions churches face are ones the Bible does not clearly address. This means pastors have to regularly practice humble, Bible-saturated prudence.
Greg Morse | When we are the victim of another’s sin, we are often in danger of becoming a culprit in how we respond.
Joe Rigney | If sexuality and baptism are both second-tier issues, why is the former often more divisive in the wider church today?
Scott Hubbard | All biblical doctrine is important, but not all biblical doctrine is equally important. So how do we discern which doctrines should divide us?
Jon Bloom | Unity is often harder in our relationships and churches because we assume it should be easy.
Greg Morse | The deepest, fullest, most vibrant unity is found in embracing, not a few favorite verses, but everything God has said in his word.
David Mathis | As the United States celebrates 246 years of independence, and Americans newly remember the ten-dollar founding father, what lessons might we learn from the rise, fall, and redemption of a prodigal son?