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What does it mean to be both black and a Christian? How, for example, should a new believer view his identity as an African American now that his ultimate identity is in Christ? Should he even care he’s black? While these particular questions are unique to African Americans, Christians of every ethnicity should consider such issues with biblical care.

In this new roundtable video, Trillia Newbell (director of community outreach for the ERLC and author of United: Captured by God’s Vision for Diversity), Vermon Pierre (lead pastor of Roosevelt Community Church in Phoenix), and John Onwuchekwa (lead pastor of Cornerstone Church in Atlanta) do just that. They show us how diversity benefits the whole church, what race reveals about the imago dei, why God creates color, and more. The 10-minute video will both encourage minorities struggling with identity and teach those in the majority how to better engage those who may have a different skin color but are still brothers and sisters in God’s family.

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Free eBook by Rebecca McLaughlin: ‘Jesus Through the Eyes of Women’

If the women who followed Jesus could tell you what he was like, what would they say?

Jesus’s treatment of women was revolutionary. That’s why they flocked to him. Wherever he went, they sought him out. Women sat at his feet and tugged at his robes. They came to him for healing, for forgiveness, and for answers. So what did women see in this first-century Jewish rabbi and what can we learn as we look through their eyes today?

In Jesus Through the Eyes of Women, Rebecca McLaughlin explores the life-changing accounts of women who met the Lord. By entering the stories of the named and unnamed women in the Gospels, this book gives readers a unique lens to see Jesus as these women did and marvel at how he loved them in return.

We’re delighted to offer this ebook to you for free.

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