2011 hot topic: hell
Hell didn’t win, but it had a “good year”, according to Barbara Bradley Hagerty on NPR’s All Things Considered.
Hell didn’t win, but it had a “good year”, according to Barbara Bradley Hagerty on NPR’s All Things Considered.
Robert P. Jones writes in his Figuring Faith blog in The Washington Post on some of the most important religions findings of 2011.
Child, for us sinners, poor and in a manger,
We would embrace thee, with love and awe;
Who would not love thee, loving us so dearly?
A couple of weeks ago I learned that the system I use frequently for online classes may change. Facebook™ continues to evolve and change. Now maybe email will go the way of the mimeograph. It is like running uphill in sand: sliding back several steps for every one ahead
If the generation in question really does find itself proceeding into a morass of increasingly ambiguous ethical and moral decision making (and that’s certainly what it feels like), shouldn’t it want every available tool at its disposal?
The web presence for The Episcopal Church has had a major overhaul today, according to a press release and – well, also according to our plain-old eyeballs.
“[T]he Anglican Communion will avoid, if at all possible, doing something as blatantly stupid as inviting membership from a church already a break-away from a member body.”
You have to wonder how the appropriation of such an in-your-face hard line on religion and overtly Christian imagery will play outside the Midwest.
“The Son of Man has no place to lay his head.”
Feast of the Holy Innocents Psalm 2 Psalm 26 (Morning) Psalm 19 Psalm 126 (Evening) Isaiah 49:13-23 or Isaiah 54:1-13 Matthew 19:1-14 or Mark 10:13-16