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Tim Keller on Churches and Race
Tim Keller says African-American churches have more to lose from desegregation. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on New Church Models
Pastor Tim Keller on cosmopolitan religion. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on Writing a Sermon
The Pastor goes through his creative process. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on “The New Atheists”
The Pastor refutes aggressive atheism. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on The Reason for God
The Pastor summarizes his two books. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on Secular New York
Pastor Tim Keller on religion in New York. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on His Theological Training
The Pastor explains his entrepreneurial spirit. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on Interpreting the Bible
The Pastor does not believe anyone is truly a biblical literalist. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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The Pastor does regularly invoke other faiths in his sermons. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on Faith and Politics
The Pastor speaks of religion’s place in the political sphere. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on the Faithful and the Faithless
The Pastor says believers and agnostics are growing at an equal pace. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on Growing Up With Faith
The Pastor recalls how he first turned to faith. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In History
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Tim Keller on the Christian Tradition in America
Tim Keller on Christianity in New York. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
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Tim Keller on the Redeemer Presbyterian Church
The Pastor explains the popularity of New York’s famous church. Read More
February 26, 2009 | In Belief
Timothy Keller is an American author, speaker, and the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church (PCA) in New York City, New York. Timothy is the author of The Reason for God and The Prodigal God.He was born and raised in Pennsylvania, and educated at Bucknell University, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, and Westminster Theological Seminary. However, he learned the most from his nine years as a pastor of West Hopewell Presbyterian Church in the small blue-collar town of Hopewell, Virginia. The congregation there loved him, suffered through his earliest days as a pastor, and taught an intellectual northerner to be clear. His second church was Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, which he started in 1989 with his wife, Kathy, and three young sons.
