Features

How Can We Avoid ‘Believing’ the Bible While Denying What It Actually Says?

We need to learn, and teach other people, not just to read the Bible but also how to interpret it, so they don’t end up being Bible-believing heretics or Jesus-followers who follow a Jesus different than the real Jesus of the Bible and history.

Is Gen Z Coming Back to Church?

When people born between 1997 and 2007 go to church, they attend, on average, about 23 services per year.

The Narrow Path for the Long Haul

The benefits of having faith stretch far beyond a spiritual checkbox. They seep into how I handle stress, find hope, and relate to others.

Be Kind: It Changes the World—and You

Simply choosing to be kind to someone could be the healing balm that he or she needs that day.

The Practice of Empowerment

If you don’t expect them to do anything yet, let them know they’re off the hook.

A Community Cornerstone

The valuable partnerships the church has with its community have made it a household name in the area.

A Shared Faith That Transcends Politics

At Mosaic, we do not endorse people, parties or platforms. Instead, we pray God’s will and best be done for everyone willing to run for political office as well as for our city, state and nation, whatever an election’s outcome.

Try These 5 Tips to Value Your Leadership Team

Praise for effort keeps your team open to grow whereas praise for attributes can sometimes cause the person to become static in order to protect those attributes.

Humbly Admitting We Are Vulnerable to Sexual Temptation Is the First Step to Avoiding a Fall

It doesn’t matter where you are and what you’re doing. We still have to be humbly alert in this area, or Satan the roaring lion will take us down, and God will humble us.

Does Your Church Have a Winning Culture?

A winning church culture should be a disciple-making conduit.

The Counterintuitive Truth About Multisite Campuses

Church consumers tend to bounce when a church goes through a tough time. Based on casual observation, it does not seem that a campus with a pastor on a screen attracts more “church consumers” than a large church with an incredible facility.