Paul David Tripp
Sort By:
Filter by topic:
Filter by author:
How to Pray When You’re Fighting with Your Spouse
5 Myths About Marriage
Most people believe one or more of these myths about marriage. Which ones do you believe?
Don’t Wait Another Year Until Easter
Don't wait until next Easter to celebrate these realities!
6 Reasons Why I Love Easter
Jesus’ Birth Gives Us Re-Birth
The ultimate gift, Jesus, was given so that you and I would have all the things we need to face all the things we encounter between the moment we first believed and the moment of our last breath. Now that's a story worth celebrating.
7 Ways Jesus Fulfilled Prophecy at His Advent
Long before we were born, God had appointed for us the One who would be the remedy for every symptom of the sin that would infect us all. Consider these words.
How Suffering Reveals Your True Self
Your responses to the situations in your life, whether physical, relational, or circumstantial, are always more determined by what is inside you (your heart) than by the things you are facing.
How to Care for Someone Battling Anxiety and Depression
Paul Tripp and David Powlison discuss how to help someone with anxiety and depression.
Hiding
Are you hiding any secrets? Maybe you’re a Christian in deep debt, but you know what the Bible has to say about money, so you want to hide your debt from your family. Maybe you’re a parent, and one of your children is simply out of control.
The Surprising Way God Helps Us With Our Daily Struggles
Whereas every physically blind person knows that he is blind, spiritually blind people are blind to their blindness; they actually think that they see, when in fact they don’t. Sin blinds me to me, as long as there is still sin inside me there will be pockets of blindness in my view of me. To our blindness God offers a remedy.
The Biggest Thing Christian Parents Forget
One of the biggest errors Christian parents make is to forget. Not forgetting the baby's diaper bag. Not forgetting to pack the school lunch. Not forgetting to pick the teenager up after practice. No, there's something much bigger that we forget.