8 Principles of Sound Christian Thinking.
Christian thinking requires more than knowledge and critical thinking skills. We examine eight habits of mind essential to the attainment of wisdom. It starts with humility.
Superbia: The perils of pride. The power of humility.
Nearly all human conflict and failure share one common denominator: the ancient Biblical sin of pride. Yet pride is often misunderstood and seldom recognized. We ignore it at our own grave peril. This new work will help you to recognize it, and overcome it.
Intellectual humility: From Ancient Biblical Proverbs to 21st Century Research.
A state of intellectual humility – taught in Scripture and affirmed by science – is the best protection against deception and error.
Thinking about Believing
Most people operate under the assumption that their beliefs are grounded in facts, reason, and experience. It follows that any error of belief must stem from one of those three. They also become the basis for our efforts to educate or persuade those with different beliefs. If only facts were so readily recognizable. We face a daily onslaught of misinformation (incorrect information with no intent to deceive) and disinformation (false information intended to deceive). The sheer volume of information pertaining to a complex topic results in information overload, limiting our human capacity to research and process a complex subject. Decades of research into human cognition reveal that many other factors enter into the mix, including heuristics and tradition but more importantly, emotions and social influences. Of these, emotional influences have been recognized as the primary driver in human belief formation. Considering the challenges we face, the reasonable response is to remain humble in light of our limitations, but that is the opposite of how we behave. The greater human tendency is toward overconfidence, one aspect of the ancient sin of Pride. A purely secular model of belief formation overlooks the reality that dark spiritual forces are at work in the battle place of ideas. They have the ability to tempt, to plant ideas, and to recruit. These principles go to the very heart of contemporary confusion regarding human sexuality; a confusion that is framed entirely within a narrative of false belief. How did we get here? How do we respond?…
Christians and Conspiracies
Why do so many of our brothers and sisters in the Lord commit the same denial of reality they mock in unbelievers? It’s complicated.
The Great Omission
By almost every measure, Western Christianity is in decline. The solution is in plain sight, but we must first identify the problem.
Courage, Sacrifice, and Corona-spiracies
As the global church responds to a deadly pandemic, responses range from courageous heroism to fatal foolishness. This is a time for courage, hope, selflessness, and humility.
What We Thought Wasn’t True: How Erroneous Belief Helped Fuel the Opiate Epidemic
While science is our best source for understanding the physical world, physicians and scientists are subject to the same cognitive pitfalls as everyone else. In certain circumstances, they err communally with potentially disastrous consequences.
“I Think, Therefore It Must Be True,” Part 2: The Science of Certainty
Are you sure? Perhaps you shouldn’t be. How Scripture and Science reveal the prideful sin of intellectual overconfidence.
Moral Hazards of the Creation Debate
In a highly charged dispute, we may behave nicely but still sin in our thoughts and attitudes. The Spaniel and I examine the moral hazards of pride, grandstanding, manipulation, and judgmentalism in the context of the creation debate.
Forgotten but not gone: Pride, ancient and new
Pride: What is it? Why should we care? From Solomon to Scientific American, agreement reigns.
“I Think, Therefore It Must Be True.” Part 1: The Science of Belief
Are humans really rational, or do other factors determine belief?
Research on human decision making has demonstrated that we are heavily influenced by nonrational factors that can lead to faulty decisions and incorrect belief (or unbelief).

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Can you be more specific about the content of your article? After reading it, I still have some doubts. Hope…