TGC exists to renew and unify the contemporary church in the ancient gospel by declaring, defending, and applying the good news of Jesus to all of life.
Readers will want to separate the wheat from the tares before they invest their precious hours of summer freedom. Here are book recommendations from TGC’s editors.
https://t.co/s08ejv48mT
In an unlikely place—a sixth-century monastery—exists a largely untapped vision of work that offers a striking alternative to our disembodied days. There a monk who lived 15 centuries ago who developed a theology of work that is surprisingly relevant for the dilemmas of 2026.
https://t.co/9mHAtnBICW
In this TGC Classic message recorded at TGCW16, Tim Keller explores the concept of friendship with God as taught in the psalms.
https://t.co/yqDBHiLk3d
In ‘Seeking Sanctuary, Finding Shalom,’ John Swinton provides meaningful vocabulary to speak about spiritual aspects of mental health without discounting psychiatry and medical interventions.
https://t.co/zPfYysKAqH
I wrote an article for @TGC about how my autoimmune disease has helped me reflect on the gospel in a new way.
In sum: Jesus became a leper for me.
https://t.co/bf9Wx1iOcy
As a business professor at @SamfordU University, I spend my days with the generation that will never know a world without AI. Some numbers from the past year have stayed with me:
* Four in ten young adults say spiritual advice from AI is as trustworthy as advice from a pastor.
* A third of teenagers have talked to an AI companion, rather than a person, about something serious and personal.
*Thirty-nine percent of Gen Z say they'd delay or skip a doctor's visit if AI told them their symptoms were low-risk.
What concerns me isn't that young people like AI. It's that a generation is learning to outsource the kinds of decisions that require wisdom, not just information, to a system that processes the world brilliantly but only ever from within it.
I wrote about this for The Gospel Coalition @TGC and to my own surprise, the framework I kept returning to was Ecclesiastes, a text roughly 3,000 years old. The Teacher ran his own experiment: pursuing knowledge and analysis to their limits, and found that even extraordinary wisdom, on its own, comes up short. I think that has something to say to our cultural moment.
Whatever your own convictions, I'd be glad to have you read it
https://t.co/A7zUJpvpF7
Help! I’m trying to share the gospel with my coworkers, but I have other colleagues who claim to be Christians, but what they believe is not biblical. How do I respond?
We answer:
https://t.co/mv9E5FEAia
A generation is looking for advice from a source that cannot access the wisdom of God. This isn’t the first time that’s happened. https://t.co/5KOIUHcBRJ
We’re told in a million subtle ways that personal fulfillment is something we can win. Happiness is something we can achieve if we just put in the work.
It’s a lie. https://t.co/l0HBeJGLWM
A movie starring Nate Bargatze (who makes clean comedy very funny in his stand-up or sketch-based comedy) *should* be funny.
So why isn’t ‘The Breadwinner’ the laugh-out-loud enjoyment it had the potential to be?
My @TGC review: https://t.co/YhJzTXCNmW
Over the last 20 years, women all over the world have started to dig into the Bible not just with their hearts but with their minds.
This is the story of Nancy Guthrie’s place in the reformation of women’s ministry.
https://t.co/sC1EYFHXUj