Kurt Bubna
Kurt Bubna is the founding and senior pastor of Eastpoint Church in Spokane Valley, WA. Bubna published his first book, Epic Grace ~ Chronicles of a Recovering Idiot, with Tyndale Momentum in 2013. He is an author of five other books, an active blogger, itinerate speaker, and a regular radio personality. He and his wife, Laura, have been married for over forty years and have four grown children and eight grandchildren.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
The Dark Side – Social Media Addiction
Twenty people or so in one place were all engaged with a screen rather than a human. Out of curiosity, I googled the phrase social media addiction.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
Why I Don’t Like to Pray in Groups
For me, private and passionate prayer is intimate and deeply personal. And public prayer is...well...just a bit too public for me.
Articles for Pastors
Hurry Sickness (an Epidemic in Our Culture)
You won’t find hurry sickness listed in any scientific journals or on the “health and activities” part of your weather app. But trust me, it’s everywhere, and it is killing people.
Articles for Pastors
Africans Call Me “Father” (and It’s Humbling)
I’ve been called a lot of things in my life. Most of them good. Some unrepeatable in a blog written by a pastor. However, when my African brothers and sisters call me Father (as a term of respect and endearment, not a religious title), it always moves me.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
There Is No Tomorrow (How to Live Free of Regret and Fear!)
In what ways would your experience today be different—maybe radically different—if you learned to let go of the past and decided to stop worrying about the future?
Articles for Pastors
Cynicism Sucks
Cynicism spreads through our soul like a virus, causing negativism that often leads to discouragement.
Articles for Outreach & Missions
Reclaiming a Broken Heart (How to Beat Compassion Fatigue)
Frankly, once upon a time, those pictures of poverty and suffering would make me cry. Sadly, however, and for too long, I was suffering from something known as compassion fatigue, and it’s a real thing.
Articles for Pastors
Why Avoiding Risks Means Avoiding Adventure (and That’s No Fun!)
Some people mistakenly think risks are only for the young.
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