No jail time for woman who strangled newborn because Canada accepts abortion, says judge
An Alberta judge has let a woman who strangled her newborn son walk free by arguing that Canada’s absence of a law on abortion signals that Canadians “sympathize” with the mother. “We live in a country where there is no protection for children in the womb right up until birth and now this judge has... Continue Reading
Is Marriage Practical? Increasingly, Couples Say “No”
In this country, 7.5 million couples share breakfast, dinner, laundry, a Netflix membership, and a bed. But they aren’t married. According to the U.S. Census bureau, the number of cohabiting couples increased approximately 13% from 2009 to 2010. Statistics can’t always accurately unearth motivations for behavior, but researchers have been trying. In her 2010 report... Continue Reading
A Place Forgotten
Remembering 9/11 – Shanksville, the site of Flight 93’s crash, gets a national makeover in time for the 10th anniversary of remembering its heroes. SOMERSET COUNTY, Pa.—The pilgrimages here started soon after the attacks. Local resident Donna Glessner remembers seeing visitors navigating Somerset County’s rural roads with maps spread out on their dashboards. Many ended... Continue Reading
The Gospel for Muslims
“How do we share the gospel with Muslims?” It’s a question I’m frequently asked. Beneath the question usually lie one or two deeper concerns. Either the thought of “Muslim evangelism” scares the questioner, or the questioner wants a special method for sharing the gospel, revealing a lack of confidence in the gospel itself. In 2005,... Continue Reading
Seventeenth Century Debates
A terrific book, the kind that lights my fire, encompassing seventeenth century issues furthering the cause of the Reformation. Controversies there were aplenty, some crossing confessional boundaries, others not so much. Drawn Into Controversie: Reformed Theological Diversity and Debates Within Seventeenth-Century British Puritanism. Edited A. G. Haykin and Mark Jones (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011) A... Continue Reading
A Pastor’s Reflections on Rachel Held Evans’ “Womanhood Project” and A Year of Biblical Womanhood
The question that deserves examination is: Does the fact that women were directed to carry out roles in various ways during the course of redemptive history provide a sound basis for the proposition that women in this present time are not just to carry out those similar roles but, in fact, different roles altogether? In... Continue Reading
Race, Segregation, and Heaven
The new movie, “The Help,” based on Kathryn Stockett’s best-selling book by the same name, continues to lead ticket sales at the box office. Both dramatize the extent and tragedy of segregation and discrimination in the South during the early 1960s. Racism affected almost every area of Southern (and many areas of Northern) society before... Continue Reading
ACLU Tries to Stop Christian Prayer Before Pittsylvania County, Va. County Board Meetings
“This body has been praying a Christian prayer since the founding of this county in 1767, even before this nation was founded, and we never have had one single complaint, said Commissioner Barber. “In fact, the ACLU refuses to tell us the name of the individual who is complaining. As far as I know, no... Continue Reading
September 11 and the Rise of New Calvinism: A Journey from Free Will to the Sovereignty of God
I also realized that the free will response didn’t get God off the hook; it just pushed His presence into the distance a little further. I remember thinking: With a word, He could have altered the plane’s direction to miss the building. In an instant, He could have alerted security screeners’ eyes to the terrorists... Continue Reading
Remembering 9/11 – “We have some planes.”
Yale professor of theology Miroslav Volf spoke on reconciliation and the role of religion in conflict. He recited “Death Fugue,” a poem by…Paul Celan: “We shovel a grave in the air. There you won’t lie all too cramped”—unaware of the deaths happening in the air only blocks south. Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001, dawned cloudless, breezy,... Continue Reading
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