
The Christians Making Atheists
Growing-up in the Church, I was taught that the worst thing one could be was a non-believer; that nothing was as tragic as a doomed soul that condemned itself by

Growing-up in the Church, I was taught that the worst thing one could be was a non-believer; that nothing was as tragic as a doomed soul that condemned itself by

These are difficult days for would-be world-savers. When you scan the morning horizon, the list of things to be burdened by seems to grow longer by the second, stretching far beyond what

Kathy Griffin made a huge mistake. She posed for a graphic photo session with a beheaded President Trump mannequin. It was vile. It was repulsive. It was misguided. It was

I remember the day after the Election, a friend of mine who happens to be white, remarked on social media that he “finally wasn’t embarrassed of America and our President.”

Growing-up in the Church, I was taught that the worst thing one could be was a non-believer; that nothing was as tragic as a doomed soul that condemned itself by

These are difficult days for would-be world-savers. When you scan the morning horizon, the list of things to be burdened by seems to grow longer by the second, stretching far beyond what

Kathy Griffin made a huge mistake. She posed for a graphic photo session with a beheaded President Trump mannequin. It was vile. It was repulsive. It was misguided. It was

I remember the day after the Election, a friend of mine who happens to be white, remarked on social media that he “finally wasn’t embarrassed of America and our President.”