Pastoral burnout is a real thing
One word summarized my personal being — burnout.
One word summarized my personal being — burnout.
There’s also something innately unhealthy about these platforms, especially for the young.
Police found the wife of a prominent trans-identified writer covered in blood and clapping her hands after she allegedly became "overwhelmed" by the results of the 2024 presidential election and murdered her father with an ice axe.
A Minnesota man at the center of a murder-suicide that left five people dead, including his two sons, expressed a hatred for Christianity on social media prior to the shootings.
A former “gender-care specialist” at Boston Children’s Hospital testified that her ex-employer slashed the time allotted for psychologists to assess minors expressing confusion about their sex before referring them for life-altering procedures.
As I prepare to vote like many of you, I am convinced that one issue exists on which we all, including our presidential candidates, must agree.
If our society continues to refuse to address this now obvious and manifest fact, more vulnerable people will suffer unnecessarily.
Christians are people called to celebrate what’s good and restore what’s broken in the world. Friendship is one of those goods, and its decline has left people broken.
A former ABC News political journalist says he believes a victory for former President Donald Trump in next month’s election could result in an unprecedented nationwide “mental health crisis.”
Pastor Reina Olmeda emphasized the importance of church leaders embracing their emotions, pointing to Jesus' human vulnerabilities as a model for deepening their connection with the Holy Spirit and effectively guiding their congregations during a talk about mental health struggles at the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference.