One of the main (and longstanding) voices within evangelical Christianity.

Perhaps the most popular Christian magazine, comes from a moderate evangelical perspective.

A Christian magazine with an emphasis on social justice and the arts. A millennial-ish publication.

A popular and free site for classes on Christianity. Contributors include well-known Christian academics such as Dr. Greg Beale (WTS), Dr. Craig Blomberg (Denver Seminary), Dr. Darrell Bock (DTS), Dr. John Coe (Talbot), among many others.

Provides free course materials for class or self-study to provide training roughly equivalent to that provided by a seminary degree. The materials appear to be of high quality and include video, audio, and written formats in several languages. For example, The Book of Joshua Forum includes contributions by Dr. Chip Hardy (SBTS), Dr. Philip Ryken (Wheaton), and Dr. Carol Kaminski (Gordon-Conwell) among others.

Pete and Geri Scazzero are two of the most important Christian voices currently discussing what a holistic, healthy spirituality looks like.

A great site for doing property research. Type in an address and you can find out all sorts of information about a property and the surrounding community including past sales, numbers of beds/baths, and so on. It is also a resource for actually selling or buying a house as one can communicate with individuals selling their homes and list one’s own home for sale.

A lot of folks aren’t familiar with RSS feeds. For those who are, you probably already know about Feedly, as it has become somewhat of a de facto replacement for the venerable but now deceased Google Reader. It offers a slick user interface, powerful keyboard shortcuts, robust tools for organizing and searching one’s feeds, etc. I’m a Feedly Pro member and happy to support the service with my money as it yields such a valuable service.
For those who aren’t familiar with RSS feeds, think of podcasts. You subscribe to a podcast and get episodic content from it. This is similar to the way an RSS feed works except it is generally for written material. Instead of visiting and revisiting the page of your favorite bloggers to see if they have written anything new, you subscribe to their RSS feed in a feed reader like Feedly and then you only need to check one place to see the latest updates from all your favorite sources.
It isn’t just personal blogs that use RSS, RSS is wisely used by popular sites such as TechCrunch, Lifehacker, and news organizations. I’d guesstimate I subscribe to several hundred feeds from across the web!

A peer-reviewed (academic) encyclopedia covering philosophical topics hosted by the University of Tennessee.

A tremendous library of Christian literature spanning across the centuries.

The community written encyclopedia. Of course there are numerous other dictionaries, but this is the standard when it comes to community written. The vast resources available from the entirety of the community are its greatest strength but also its greatest weakness in that it weakens its authority.

Covers a wide variety of topics written by competent individuals. You’ll find summaries and analyses of numerous of the world’s most famous literature as well helpful guides to other topics such as math, physics, and psychology.