Each Friday, I’ll post links to 3–5 resources from around the web you may want to check out.
Gospel-Centered Resolutions
This is a helpful explanation of how the gospel can reshape our approach to resolutions.
The gospel challenges our normal approach to resolutions. Rather than starting with our desires, it reminds us that our desires are deceitful. We need to look elsewhere for our goals. Rather than telling us how to find value, the gospel reminds us that our value has been established by the blood of Jesus on the cross. Rather than telling us to try harder and be better to accomplish our goals, the gospel is the “power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Rom. 1:16). A gospel-centered approach is simply truer. It is more life-giving. It is powerful. If you’ve given up on resolutions before, don’t lose hope. Instead, give up on “you-centered” resolutions and replace them with the gospel.
5 Habits for Better Prayer in 2026
This writer offers suggestions for mindsets toward prayer in the context of maintaining a relationship with God.
Prayer is, first and foremost, being in our Father’s presence. One of the most common hindrances to prayer is the fear of not “doing it right,” like a student hesitant to attempt a tricky math problem. Yet prayer is about cherishing a relationship, not cracking a formula. It’s not the eloquence of our words but the posture of our hearts that the Lord considers.
The Key to Finding the Author’s Emphasis When You Read the Bible
Jon Nielson offers some suggestions to find the structure of Bible passages.
This tool operates on the basis that every passage in the Bible has a clear structure, and the structure is important because it shows us the focus or thrust of the passage. In other words, the way the biblical author puts a passage together can show us what that author means to emphasize, highlight, and bring out for his readers. Very often, the structure of a passage is the main key to interpreting it well, understanding it rightly, and applying it faithfully to our lives. This is why the construction tool is so important—it helps us see what the biblical authors want us to see.
On the WPCA Blog This Week
This week on the blog we published an article I wrote called The Bible Is Not About You. If you haven’t already seen it, check it out!
Note: Washington Presbyterian Church and the editors of this blog do not necessarily endorse all content produced by the individuals or groups referenced here.
- Links for the Weekend (2026-01-09) - January 9, 2026
- The Bible Is Not About You - January 7, 2026
- Links for the Weekend (2026-01-02) - January 2, 2026
