When Sex Differences Should Count
Highlighting sex differences is good. And it is also bad. I have tried to learn when they should count. Because enumerating sex differences can help and hurt.
Highlighting sex differences is good. And it is also bad. I have tried to learn when they should count. Because enumerating sex differences can help and hurt.
On average on every trait, men and women are more similar than different, but that doesn’t make the differences irrelevant.
Surprising directive from the apostle Paul really helps those wishing to break a pornography compulsion.
A father needs to break the cultural silence about manhood for a boy to hear his call and take the steps to becoming a man.
Here is a secret: Every boy begins with doubt that he is man. The Biblical story of the young Samuel “growing in stature” pictures maturing to manhood for us.
For a word that gets tossed about quite a bit, it is surprising how murky its definition is. Both feminists and gender ideologues advance a partial truth.
Jesus identifies in ways that surprise us, that we might get a glimpse of what is otherwise opaque to us—the glory of the Invisible Incomprehensible Divine.
A book by the doctors who were helpful in reversing Great Britain’s belief-affirming model for gender dysphoric youth offers a different model.
With the passing of Tim Keller last week, here are some fond remembrances from a congregant and mentee.
I have friends who deal with same sex attraction and who also speak about gender confusion in their childhood or youth. What is the meaning of the connection?