Touchdown Jesus statue destroyed by lightning : Touchdown Jesus, more properly known as King of Kings, was one of southwest Ohios best known and biggest landmarks: A fixture at the Solid Rock Church by Monroe, Ohio since it was completed in 2004, it had a 42-foot . . . . Continue Reading »
One of the things about our current cultural milieu that has always puzzled me is the drive to create an absolute fundamental right to procreate—and the concomitant push to permit an absolute and fundamental right to destroy unborn life. (You know how it goes: Today, the child is . . . . Continue Reading »
Kevin DeYoung reviews Richad Stearns’s The Hole in Our Gospelthe Evangelical Publishing Association’s 2010 Book of the Year.Kevin prefaces his review in this way:There are many more positives I could highlight about Stearns and his book than get included in my piece. The nature of . . . . Continue Reading »
Priestly celibacy, Pope Benedict XVI recently told a gathering of priests, as reported by the Italian journalist Sandro Magister, is an anticipation “of the world of the resurrection.” It is the sign “that God exists, that God is part of my life, that I can base my life on Christ, . . . . Continue Reading »
My friend Manolo the Shoebloggerone of the great Internet prose stylists of our time has an idea : It is Monday, and coming back from the Pilates this morning you ran into your old frenemy, Jenny, who described for you at great and exhausting length her new workout regime: the form of . . . . Continue Reading »
We need to stop smuggling “comprehensive doctrines” into our public discourse, because that deceptive refusal to admit metaphysics distorts and corrupts it, writes senior editor R. R. Reno in Metaphysics and the Common Good , today’s “On the Square” article. In . . . . Continue Reading »
Unsubstantiated rumour has it that a group of atheists and agnostics wants to remove the motto IN GOD WE TRUST from American coins and replace it with CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE . . . . Continue Reading »
On the recommendation of David Bentley Hart , I read Richard Dawkinss The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution . Like Hart, I too enjoyed the book and was relieved that Dawkins kept his belligerence against religion mostly in check. (Operative word: mostly .) One passage, . . . . Continue Reading »
Over at Times and Seasons, a blog mostly for Mormons, where I am guest, I have posted some thoughts on a “third-order” question that lies behind or underneath the most vital (I think) contemporary political issues. Come on over and join the fray, if you dare. . . . . Continue Reading »
Today I’m going to reflect on a passage from Willa Cather’s achingly beautiful novel, O Pioneers! (1913), a title inspired by Walt Whitman’s poem. The Library of America offers a short description of the book in case you’re not familiar with it:O Pioneers! is the story of a . . . . Continue Reading »