The Catholic News Agency reports that an Argentinian man, who was abandoned by his mother at birth, recently reunited with his mother through Facebook: Mauricio, 23, was abandoned by his mother at birth. In an effort to find her, he created a Facebook group called “Im searching for my . . . . Continue Reading »
The Treasury Department may be uglyfying our currency , but the portraits on the bills are being prettied up to meet our modern standards of beauty. Newsweek asked New York plastic surgeon surgeon Dr. David Hidalgo to examine the extreme makeovers . Here’s what he has to say about the updates . . . . Continue Reading »
Hes back. Jack Kevorkian is again on the front pages above the fold. And hes making the rounds of interviews. He might think he has died and gone to heavenexcept he doesnt believe in heaven. After death, he has said, you stink and rot. With the release of the HBO . . . . Continue Reading »
In Paying a Price for Bias , Inside Higher Ed reports that a Baptist university in Kentucky lost state money for a pharmacy school after the state’s supreme court ruled against them, in a case brought by a homosexualist lobby group. It would be nice if a conscientiously held moral view, . . . . Continue Reading »
Two weeks ago, I wrote here about a proposed new “crime against peace” called ecocide, deemed to be equivalent to genocide. I will have more to say about that matter soon, but in the meantime, it seems increasingly clear that—hand-in-hand with personalizing . . . . Continue Reading »
A few weeks ago, I castigated the creators of the mega crude Family Guy for using the V-word to make fun of Terri Schiavo. Using the word “vegetable” to describe anything but carrots or squash—in other words, to describe any human being—is hateful and intended to . . . . Continue Reading »
With the ongoing discussions about Bruce Waltke’s video at the BioLogos website and his subsequent resignation from RTS, as well as the long comment thread here at Evangel about events in Genesis, I thought I would post some thoughts about the relationship between science and religion that . . . . Continue Reading »
I first met Timmy Bishop in January of 2004 when he and his parents, Tim and Jennifer, came to our house for a meal. Timmy was four at the time, and his father Tim was something of a new Calvinist looking for a Reformed-type church, so we invited them over to talk.In the process of the conversation, . . . . Continue Reading »
This week’s intellectual gossip from England: An historian’s wife, herself an academic, is discovered writing anonymous reviews on Amazon.com praising his books and trashing his peers’. He claims not to have known, after threatening to sue publications that even mentioned he was . . . . Continue Reading »
During the middle years of the Clinton presidency (1995-1998), I served as a recruiter for the Marine Corps. Although the Dont Ask, Dont Tell policy had been in effect for several years, everyone in my station could recite from memory the recruiting scene in the 1981 movie . . . . Continue Reading »