Our indoor playground is currently closed due to construction. Keep an eye on our website for updates.
In recent weeks at IBC, we’ve been discussing the importance of wrestling with our own personal past—our life story—to better understand our present and God’s intentions for our future. This is a vitally important part of our ongoing spiritual growth and development. God has made us who we are through the formative experiences and relationships of our lives: though our heritage, our heroes, our high points, and our hard times.
Read MoreWhen William P. Young self-published The Shack about a decade ago, he touched off a fierce theological debate about the problem of evil and the nature of the Trinity.
Yesterday, my husband and I took our kids Drew (9) and Madeline (6) to the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. As Fort Worthians, we find it’s almost a necessary outing each year, like a holy pilgrimage.
Last month, I sat down with Barry Jones, Jason Elwell, Crystal Elwell, and Jason Stein to discuss Lent at IBC.
A colleague told me today that he particularly appreciated a specific point I made in my sermon last Sunday on being a peacemaker.
Before we can really talk about worship, there’s one idea we all need to grab ahold of: we are all worshipers.
I taught at IBC last Sunday on Jesus’ fifth beatitude, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall be shown mercy.”