11 Years Old, a Mom, and Pushed to Marry Her Rapist in Florida
You’re thinking: “Child marriage? That’s what happens in Bangladesh or Tanzania, not America!”
Johnson, the former 11-year-old unwitting bride who is now fighting for Florida to set a minimum marriage age (there is none now), says that her family attended a conservative Pentecostal church and that other girls of a similar age periodically also married. Often, she says, this was to hide rapes by church elders. She says... Continue Reading
How Oxford and Peter Singer Drove Me From Atheism To Jesus
Christianity was also, to my surprise, radical – far more radical than the leftist ideologies with which I had previously been enamored.
One Sunday, shortly before my 28th birthday, I walked into a church for the first time as someone earnestly seeking God. Before long I found myself overwhelmed. At last I was fully known and seen and, I realised, unconditionally loved – perhaps I had a sense of relief from no longer running from God. A... Continue Reading
Why Do Churches Wound Their Pastors?
“What is the single greatest problem facing pastors today?” I replied, “The greatest problem is internal opposition from subversive co-leaders and self-appointed critics within the church.”
Why does the church freely, cruelly criticize its pastors for falling short of perfection? Why do we forget that Jesus alone is perfect, that Jesus alone redeems? To demand perfect skill, holiness, and ever-effective labor from anyone is akin to idolatry. Grace-centered churches must know this. But churches idolize their pastors one day and savage... Continue Reading
4 Books That Made a Priest Leave the Church
It took Luther about eight years (1513-1521) to hammer out an understanding of the gospel. What Martin Luther was reading during this crucial time in his life?
The last book that turned a medieval priest into a true Reformer was the letter to the Hebrews. Luther began to embrace an entirely different understanding of how the Old and New Testaments relate to one another. He realized that the law is not simply the Old Testament and the gospel is the New Testament,... Continue Reading
Professor Who Called Diversity Training At Duke Divinity A ‘Waste’ Resigns After Dean Punishes Him
A Duke University Divinity School professor who called diversity training a “waste” of time has resigned after disciplinary proceedings were launched against him
A Duke University Divinity School professor who called diversity training a “waste” of time has resigned after disciplinary proceedings were launched against him and he was barred by his dean from faculty meetings. At issue is a February email in which Professor Paul Griffiths advised his colleagues not to bother with a proffered volunteer diversity training,... Continue Reading
‘I Might . . . Pull Off a Leg or Two’
A shocking new undercover video exposes the grisly reality of ripping apart fetuses.
Dr. Ann Schutt-Aine, the director of abortion services for Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast (which has been referred to local law-enforcement for criminal charges related to fetal-tissue trafficking): If I’m doing a procedure, and I’m seeing that I’m in fear that it’s about to come to the umbilicus [navel], I might ask for a second set... Continue Reading
John Knox and the Women Who Loved Him
Why did these and many other women express so much love toward a man who blew a fierce trumpet against female rulers?
In spite of his formidable life and bold choices, Knox is still largely unknown. Maybe his larger-than-life charisma is the very reason for this neglect. People generally remember blazes and flares. In his case, they remember the blasts of his trumpet against women rulers – especially Mary Queen of Scots, “that cursed Jesabel,” as he... Continue Reading
Turkey Levels Charges Against Andrew Brunson
Turkish media is reporting May 19 that EPC teaching elder Andrew Brunson is being accused of being a “Kurdish sympathizer”
Hurriyet, the leading English-language news outlet in Turkey, reported that prosecutors are citing Brunson for “delivering sermons to the Kurds with a ‘special purpose’”—wording that implies support for an ethnic group that Turkey is waging a military campaign against. The Kurds are a minority group in Turkey (primarily located in the eastern and southeastern parts... Continue Reading
Healing a House Divided: An Interview with Presiding Bishop Michael Curry
"The essence of sin is separation."
Bishop Curry was elected to be the 27th presiding bishop and primate of the Episcopal Church in 2015, becoming the first African American leader of the denomination. Before his installation, he served as bishop of the diocese of North Carolina for 15 years, and previously he served as a pastor in North Carolina, Ohio, and... Continue Reading
The Joys of Life
In an effort to squeegee politics out of my life for a long weekend, I recently attended several sporting events that highlighted my granddaughters’ skills in soccer and swimming.
All in all, this weekend gave us a most delightful and wonderful experience, thankfully devoid of politics, and bursting with the joys of life, why it is worth living—family, children, grandchildren, love, competition, laughter, exhilaration, goofiness all around, plenty to share, and memories that will never fade. Certainly, it is all this that keeps us... Continue Reading
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