by Daniel Robert Berendt
Across North America and the world, the youth of many churches who profess Christianity are wearing bracelets, necklaces, and other paraphernalia with the acronym WWJD.
by Scott Ashley
The articles in this issue will help you understand the answers to these questions. And then there’s another important question: What will you do about it?
by Emma Kennebeck
If He came back tomorrow, would He recognize you as someone doing what He would do?
by Robert Curry
We text and tweet, and soon “What Would Jesus Do?” becomes “WWJD.” But at United Youth Camps a better question is “WDJD”—“What Did Jesus Do?”
by Don Hooser
Most folks who celebrate Halloween are nice people, but that doesn’t make Halloween nice.
by Robert Curry
Agatha Christie, John Grisham and Alfred Hitchcock have their die-hard fans, but the Bible is the best-selling, most-read whodunit mystery ever written—even though it is totally unlike the others.