What did God mean in Acts 18 when he told Paul he had people in Corinth?

JEFF TURNER

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is a topic of much debate. This writing is the conclusion of the author, but the Bible is the ultimate authority.

When God told the Apostle Paul to stay in Corinth because he had many people in that city, the natural question is how there could already be God’s people in a place where the gospel had not yet been preached. The answer is not that God saves people apart from the gospel; scripture is clear on that point in multiple places. Faith comes through hearing, and hearing requires someone to bring the message. No one is saved without first receiving and believing the gospel.

What the verse does point to is the reality of God’s sovereign election. Before the world was made, God determined who he would save and those names were written in the book of life. He knows his people before his people know him. When he told Paul that he had people in Corinth, he was saying that there were individuals there who would believe when they heard the message, because they had already been chosen. This is not a reason to skip evangelism; it is the very reason evangelism works. The preaching of the gospel is the means God uses to call the people he has already chosen.

just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we would be holy and blameless before Him. In love He predestined us to adoption as sons and daughters through Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will,

Ephesians 1:4-5

What Revelation 21 promises about joy and memory in heaven

JEFF TURNER

Revelation 21:4 says that in heaven there will be no more pain and that the former things have passed away, and this raises a heartfelt question for many believers: will we remember the suffering of this life, or the people we loved who did not come to faith? I believe the answer that scripture points toward is that heaven will be a place of complete and uninterrupted joy, with nothing present that could bring sorrow or weigh down the heart in any way.

That kind of total joy makes it difficult to imagine carrying grief or regret into eternity. It seems that the heartaches of this world, and even the memories of our own sins, will not follow us there. To remember the specific wrongs from which we have been forgiven would in some sense be to recycle sin in the mind, and that has no place in a sinless eternity. Believers will know the joy of forgiveness without being haunted by what they were forgiven from. Everything in heaven will serve to increase joy, and nothing will be allowed to diminish it.

For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.

Romans 8:18

Chuck Wagon Gang Honoured by Louisiana on 90th Anniversary

AMY TURNER

May 20th proved to be a landmark day in the long story of The Chuck Wagon Gang, as the State of Louisiana formally recognised the country gospel group’s nine decades of contributions to American Gospel music and their enduring connection to the state.

The Chuck Wagon Gang has roots stretching back to 1935, when patriarch David P. Carter founded the group alongside his eldest son Ernest and two eldest daughters, Lola and Effie. Within a year, the family ensemble had secured their first radio opportunity, performing as sponsored singers for Bewley Flour in 1936, a modest beginning that would grow into one of the most sustained careers in gospel music history.

On May 20th, members of the group received commendations from Governor Jeff Landry and were honoured during a ceremony hosted by Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser, marking the occasion as a formal recognition of the group’s place in the state’s cultural memory.

The day’s most vivid moment came when The Chuck Wagon Gang was invited onto the floor of the Louisiana State Senate to perform. The group delivered a medley of “I’ll Fly Away” and “You Are My Sunshine” before receiving an official Senate Proclamation commemorating their 90th anniversary and musical legacy.

The celebrations did not end there. A few days later, while continuing on tour, the group received the Key to the City of Many, Louisiana , another formal tribute marking the same milestone anniversary.

Taken together, the recognitions amount to a rare moment of institutional acknowledgment for a group that has spent 90 years at the intersection of faith, family, and American folk tradition. For The Chuck Wagon Gang, Louisiana’s tribute was both a homecoming and a testament to the staying power of gospel music rooted in sincerity and simplicity.

What Ephesians 5 actually means when it says sexual immorality must not be named among believers

JEFF TURNER

Ephesians 5:3 says that sexual immorality and greed must not even be named among believers, and one reader took that to mean that Christians struggling with sexual sin should not talk about it with others. But the verse is not about silence; it is about identity. Paul’s point is that these sins should have no place among God’s people, not that the topic is off limits in a context of genuine care and accountability.

Confessing sin to a trusted fellow believer is encouraged throughout scripture, and receiving support and prayer from others is part of what it means to live in Christian community. The verse in Ephesians is calling believers to a standard of holiness where sexual immorality simply does not characterise who they are. It is not a prohibition against the kind of honest, private conversations that help people find freedom from sin. At the same time, there is no need to share every ugly detail publicly; the goal is mutual support and accountability, not a full rehearsal of everything done in darkness.

Therefore, confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be healed. A prayer of a righteous person, when it is brought about, can accomplish much.

James 5:16

A new voice from 8th Street has a message for anyone who has ever felt like giving up

AMY TURNER

Jonathan Thompson did not write “Here Comes the Promise” in a moment of inspiration. He wrote it out of need.

Thompson, a member of the group 8th Street, recently released the song as his debut single, and the backstory behind it is as personal as the music itself. He has spoken openly about the fact that the lyrics draw from his own experience of hitting a low point and finding, as he describes it, the peace of God moving in.

The song opens in a place many listeners will recognise: a desperate situation, no clear path forward, and a cry for help. “There was a time in my life when I was so low, in a desperate situation, didn’t know where to go,” the lyrics begin, “so I cried out, ‘Jesus help me, I can’t make it on my own.'” What follows is not a resolution wrapped in easy comfort, but a declaration: the promise is coming, the victory belongs to God, even if the reason is not yet visible.

Thompson has described the song as partly his testimony and partly a message he believes applies broadly. “This is partially my testimony, but it’s a message that we all can learn from,” he said. “It’s a message, again, that God has told us to put all of our cares on Him, to make sure that we don’t… we don’t worry ourselves to death because he’s got it all under control.”

He was careful, though, not to position himself above the struggle he is singing about. He acknowledged that knowing something in faith and living it out are two different things. “I know I’ve caught myself doing that,” he said, referring to the tendency to worry despite believing otherwise. “You do have concerns and things, but we just need to remember that the promises of God are yea and amen, and he is going to come through for us.”

The song’s second verse addresses the listener more directly, shifting from personal testimony to invitation: “Friend, if you are in a struggle, you don’t know what to do, you try to handle it on your own, you feel so tired, you’re through, cast your cares upon the master, for he cares so much for you, just give it all to him, for his strength will carry you.” The language is plain and the sentiment is familiar to anyone raised in or near a Pentecostal or evangelical tradition, but Thompson delivers it without the triumphalism that can sometimes hollow out that kind of message.

The song closes with a lyric drawn from Isaiah: “They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall take up wings and soar higher than they’ve ever been.” It is a fitting end for a song that does not promise ease so much as endurance.

Thompson’s framing of the release itself reflects a similar kind of deliberateness. He indicated he spent considerable time thinking through what he wanted the song to communicate before putting it out. “I’ve thought a lot about this song,” he said. “What am I trying to convey to get across to people about this song? Being my first song that I’ve actually completed and recorded and released out, I want to make sure that people understand.”

The central conviction he lands on is straightforward, even if living it is anything but: “It doesn’t matter if the entire world stands against us. If God gave you a promise, it’s going to happen.”

For listeners who have been carrying something heavy, that may be exactly the reminder they needed to hear.