With Christmas coming up, Pastor and author Max Lucado shared why the Nativity story stands out from “every other theology.”
With Christmas coming up, Pastor and author Max Lucado shared why the Nativity story stands out from “every other theology.”
Max Lucado seems ready to talk about his new book “God Never Gives Up on You” and how it has played out in his own life. In a sit-down interview with Christian Headlines, Lucado said that he would be a lost sinner without God's love and grace. In his new book, Lucado reveals his struggle with a demanding schedule, which drove him to drink alcohol. Lucado also reveals in the book how God didn’t give up on him even while trying to hide his sin. It led him to study the life of Jacob, the main Biblical character the book explores. Lucado believes we have more in common with Jacob than we realize. Yet God has still chosen to use us anyway.
In his new book, minister and author Max Lucado opens up about his past use of alcohol, saying he once drank beer to "manage" stress instead of asking the elders for help with his jam-packed schedule.
Pastor and best-selling author Max Lucado recently shared that he received the spiritual gift of speaking in tongues, which he now practices during his prayer time.
Pastor and best-selling Christian author Max Lucado is praising god for shirking his ascending aortic aneurysm.
In an interview with Religion News Service, Christian author and pastor Max Lucado opened up about finding peace in his divine purpose despite the many hardships he is facing.
On Wednesday, pastor and Christian author Max Lucado announced that he has been diagnosed with an "ascending aortic aneurysm."
Christian pastor and author Max Lucado has tested positive for COVID-19, despite being fully vaccinated.
Evangelical pastor Max Lucado has apologized for comments he made in a 2004 sermon about homosexuality, although he did assert that he still believes in the “traditional biblical understanding of marriage.”
The Washington National Cathedral, a prominent Episcopal church in the nation’s capital, came under fire after it announced that it had invited author and pastor Max Lucado, who maintains a traditional view on marriage, to preach during a virtual service.