• Christianity

    The Epiphany of Rod Dreher

    A couple weeks ago, I posted a brief note about Rod Dreher’s excellent book The Little Way of Ruthie Leming. If you’ve read that book, then you know that Dreher’s story doesn’t really end with the last page. His rocky relationship with his father and the revelation of Ruthie’s true feelings about him are too new to have been completely processed and dealt with. Moving home didn’t make all the old issues evaporate. In a blog late last night, Dreher indicates that he has reached a personal and spiritual milestone. In his own words:

  • News,  Politics

    How Obamacare provides taxpayer funded abortions

    Remember the “pro-life” legislators who promised that Obamacare wouldn’t fund abortions? Where are they now? Sarah Torre of the Heritage Foundation has a lengthy article explaining how Obamacare entangles taxpayers in the funding of abortion-on-demand. This is not an article about the contraception mandate that has been so much in the news lately. It’s about how the state exchanges subsidize insurance plans that cover elective abortions. She writes:

  • Christianity,  Politics

    Southern Seminary hosts Mohler, Douthat, and Prager

    I’m really excited to announce that Southern Seminary will be hosting a panel discussion featuring Albert Mohler, Ross Douthat, and Dennis Prager. It will be held in Alumni Chapel at 7pm, Tuesday, January 28. The topic of the discussion will be “Faith and Freedom in the Public Square.” This promises to be a fascinating discussion. Although these three men are generally identified as “conservatives,” their religious views are quite different. Mohler is an evangelical, Douthat a Roman Catholic, and Prager Jewish. I’m looking forward to an interesting exchange of views. This is a rare opportunity. If you can be here for this event, I highly recommend that you visit the…

  • Christianity,  Politics

    Progressive evangelical indifference about abortion

    Andrew Walker and Dan Darling have put the screws on progressive evangelicals and their indifference about abortion-on-demand. Progressives say they care about “social justice” issues, yet they somehow cannot (or will not) muster social justice concern for the unborn. In an opinion piece for Christianity Today, they write: Among progressive evangelicals, there’s a reflexive hesitancy to tout or raise the banner of human life as a preeminent justice issue. You’ll hear individuals in this camp dance around the sanctity of life—writing it off as “political” or “complicated.”… They’re against the circumstances of teenage poverty that lead to abortion. They’re against sexual abuse. They’re against a libertine sexual ethic (though many…

  • Christianity,  Theology/Bible

    Egalitarianism and the functional authority of scripture

    Sarah Bessey, author of Jesus Feminist, has a lengthy blog post expressing her disagreement with Candace Cameron Bure. Last week, Bure was in the news for defending a complementarian view of gender roles. Bessey argues that Bure’s decision to submit to her husband is both unbiblical and harmful to women. Bessey’s remarks are pretty standard egalitarian fare. There’s nothing really new at all in her critique of complementarianism. Nevertheless, there was one line in her post that jumped off of the page at me. It stood out not because it is new, but because it is “Exhibit A” of what is wrong with egalitarian exegesis. Here’s the sentence:

  • Christianity,  Culture

    Complementarian conviction under the microscope

    Candace Cameron Bure is perhaps best known for her role as a child star on the 80’s sitcom “Full House.” Like her brother Kirk Cameron, she has grown up to be an outspoken Christian. She has been in the news lately promoting her new book Balancing It All: My Story of Juggling Priorities and Purpose. In the book, she promotes what looks to be a complementarian view of gender roles in her marriage. I have not read the book, but I have read the passage that is raising eyebrows in her media appearances. She writes,

  • News

    Mom eats 72-ounce steak in under 3 minutes

    You’re gonna have to see this one to believe it. Molly Schuyler is 34 years old and weighs 125 pounds. She has a very special talent. She competes in eating contests. She pretty much owns anyone that she squares off against. In the exhibition above, she downs a 72-ounce steak in under three minutes.

  • News

    Man loses 37 lbs after eating McDonalds for 3 months

    The video above is a news report about a man who ate at McDonalds three meals a day for three months. In doing so, he was testing the conclusions reached by the documentary “Super Size Me,” which attributed blame to McDonalds for obesity and poor health. In this new experiment, the subject regulated his caloric intake daily, and at the end of three months he lost 37 pounds! And he didn’t just eat salads the whole time. Burgers and ice cream were a part of his regular diet as well. He was able to achieve this result simply by controlling how much he was eating and by walking for about…