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Featured image for “Does Gender Matter in the Academic World?”
September 16, 2015
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Essays

Does Gender Matter in the Academic World?

by Neal DeRoo
…all professors, including for many women. So, how deeply is my experience as a professor a “gendered” experience? Is my experience a “male” experience or just my experience? Please share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below, and we can open a discussion on how much gender matters in the academy and higher education. The inspiration to try to describe my experience in a numbered list of smaller events comes from Peggy McIntosh. ↩…
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Featured image for “In the era of mean tweets…and much, much worse”
March 16, 2015
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Essays

In the era of mean tweets…and much, much worse

by Abby Foreman
…k harder at learning how to engage civilly with one another in shared space–whether that’s the public square or on Twitter. It’s not easy, but it is important to do. For every fiery or derisive response that is made–often without little forethought–we have to remember that there are many silent observers who are engaged in the discussion or disagreement and are observing how we handle things. Disagreeing respectfully is possible, even if it not…
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Featured image for “Why I am a Feminist”
September 13, 2017
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Essays

Why I am a Feminist

by Caleb Schut
…e.g. Revelation 17:14, 19:16), a Father to his son (e.g. 1 Corinthians 8:6)–none of these being peer-to-peer relationships, at least as such relationships play out in the stories of the Bible*. In light of these consistent themes throughout both testaments, how should Christians distinguish the unique roles of husband and wife in marriage? Could the events of your marriage’s history be congruent (as I believe they probably are) with a more gender…
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Featured image for “Is the Church for Sinners or Saints?”
January 28, 2015
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Devotions

Is the Church for Sinners or Saints?

by Neal DeRoo
…l smiles and nice clothes, good looking kids and their put-together, on-top-of-things dad joining up with their already-been-serving-the-church mom to sit together as a nice, Christian family. Perfect. And that’s the lie. We aren’t perfect, I’m rarely nice (at least to my family), I’m certainly not on-top-of-things (especially in the parenting department), and the clothes we’re all wearing won’t last five minutes past our getting home from church…
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Featured image for “Faith, Politics, and Social Media”
April 28, 2015
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Essays

Faith, Politics, and Social Media

by Dave Mulder
…ulder Thanks for the affirmation, Ed. And I’m so glad you take on this issue with your social studies methods students. We need to model this kind of behavior for our students (and for all our children, really.) This calls to mind the many times over my years teaching middle schoolers–in Christian schools!–when my students would say audacious things about some political figure. And I knew that they were simply parroting things they’ve heard othe…
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Featured image for “Why I Homeschool”
September 14, 2017
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Essays

Why I Homeschool

by Dawn Berkelaar
…case, we were definitely committed to giving our kids a Christian education–it was a matter of how we could feasibly do so in our situation. For us, homeschooling was feasible, and has turned out to be a wonderful adventure. Dr. Douglas De Boer Dawn, we seem to be in agreement. By the way, I did not intend to post twice on the topic. At 11:00 AM I thought I had posted the comment. Later I checked for any responses and my comment was missing. I wa…
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Featured image for “iAt Book Club: The Benedict Option”
April 5, 2017
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Books

iAt Book Club: The Benedict Option

by Gustavo Maya
…whole response here: http://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/benedict-option-benedict-arnold/ Scott Pryor “There’s clearly a disconnect between these two. Smith refers to the loss of power and privilege of white Christianity. Dreher responds with the overall number for the decline of Christianity in America. Those are two distinct points, and they can both be right. Christianity, as a whole, can be in decline even as certain segments of it c…
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Featured image for “What Does Populism Mean?”
July 13, 2016
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Essays

What Does Populism Mean?

by Jeff Taylor
…through complete consensus (unanimity). Popular sovereignty means that all-of-the-people rule by collectively sharing power but this is translated, in practical terms, into rule by the-majority-of-the-people when it comes to public policy decisions. Populists usually acknowledge some guarantee of minority rights even as they champion majority rule. Given the perceived impracticality of direct, Athenian-style democracy in the modern world of large…
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Featured image for “Should We be on FIRE?”
August 25, 2020
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Essays

Should We be on FIRE?

by Tim Klein
…urney to financial independence goes into hyperspeed. Quickly, our goals become an idol. Questions come into our mind: how quickly can I save the money; how can I make more money; if I work more, can I save more? We begin to lose focus on many important areas of life that God has blessed us with—family, friends, etc. We work longer hours to earn a little more. We pass up opportunities to go out with friends. We work extra jobs to pay off our debt….
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Featured image for “Weapons of Math Destruction”
October 20, 2017
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Essays

Weapons of Math Destruction

by Derek Schuurman
…’s intents for his world. In fact, as more decisions are informed by number-crunching computers, we will need to make sure that justice and transparency are emphasized. “The Architecture of Evil” not only tells the story of Albert Speer, but goes on to suggest that “Today’s engineers need a more well-rounded education—one that stresses not only the analytical skills necessary to be a good engineer but also the liberal arts that are necessary… for
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Featured image for “Interpreting and the Church”
October 17, 2019
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Essays

Interpreting and the Church

by Piet Koene
…undproof location listening via a sound feed to the booth. This allows for real-time interpreting, so the overall time of the service is not increased. It is very welcoming for visitors and allows them to feel that they are fully participating, since they can understand all that is being said. However, proper simultaneous interpreting requires someone who has been trained in simultaneous interpreting. Consecutive interpreting, on the other hand, i…
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Featured image for “Small Habits, Big Changes: A Review of <em> Atomic Habits </em>”
May 23, 2022
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Books

Small Habits, Big Changes: A Review of Atomic Habits

by Kayt Frisch
…ocusing on goals does not contribute to lasting change, noting that “a goal-oriented mind-set can create a ‘yo-yo’ effect”3. I’ve seen this at work in my own life with exercise – in my 20s, I had a goal of doing a sprint triathlon, because I wanted to be fit, and I did this (twice!) but both times after the race ended, so did all regular exercise. Clear further observes that “goal setting suffers from a serious case of survivorship bias”4, that is…
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Featured image for “Dear Parents of College Freshmen”
August 21, 2015
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Essays

Dear Parents of College Freshmen

by Kim Brinkerhoff
…am towards the future, but we are only afforded living in the present to accomplish both. Consider it an immense privilege to encourage your student as they walk through these unfamiliar changes. College should be a community set up to support and equip them for academic and lifestyle success: not just to survive, but to thrive. When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. But when I grew up, I put away childish things.I Corint…
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Featured image for “After the Storm”
August 14, 2017
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Devotions

After the Storm

by Sarah Bixler
Daily Scripture Texts Psalm 18:1-19 Genesis 7:11-8:5 2 Peter 2:4-10 First, the full moon stopped shining. Then came the thunder, rolling out of the dark night sky. Lightning flashed, and—finally—the rain started. It began as a steady pitter-patter but soon pelted our canvas tent as it blew in sheets across the narrow island. My husband and our three children had pitched our tent on the sandy soil of the Gulf Islands National Seashore in northwest…
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Featured image for “Science for All Christians”
May 4, 2018
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Essays

Science for All Christians

by Jeff Ploegstra
…ikely than other to see conflict between faith and science. http://assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/14/2015/10/PI_2015-10-22_religion-and-science_FINAL.pdf  ↩…
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Featured image for “What Online Communities Leave Out: Unlikely Friendships”
November 27, 2018
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Essays

What Online Communities Leave Out: Unlikely Friendships

by Matthew Arbo
…received. I still preach regularly, and I often find myself wondering what he would say about the sermons I preach these days. I definitely miss those half-sheets of paper. And I am thankful that friendship can transcend first impressions….
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Featured image for “An Empty Patch of Sky”
December 16, 2016
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Essays

An Empty Patch of Sky

by Tom Clark
…lestial sphere, coming through Middle English from an Old English word for cloud. A great cloud of witnessed indeed! Wesley captures beautifully how it is not only the angels, but the very heavens themselves are bringing glory to God, just as they do every night. Except that on this one night, the veil was lifted for a few chosen men to see it more clearly, just as the Hubble telescope did when it starred patiently at what we all thought was an em…
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Featured image for “God Fought For Us”
August 12, 2017
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Devotions

God Fought For Us

by Amy DeGroot Bowling
Daily Scripture Texts Psalm 85:8-13 1 King 18:41-46 Matthew 16:1-4 I met an Ethiopian brother in Christ a few months ago who lived through persecution under the Ethiopian Communist government in the late 1970s and early 80s. Since then, he has worked for the U.N. in Indonesia, and is currently the head of curriculum development in the seminaries of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church. One night over dinner, he told me this story. “When the Communist…
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Featured image for “Ghosts of America’s Past, Present, and Future: A Review of <em> Preparing for War </em>”
January 5, 2023
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Books

Ghosts of America’s Past, Present, and Future: A Review of Preparing for War

by Scott Culpepper
…pate how it will take shape in and influence the public square in years to come?” (chapters 9-11)  Onishi describes how White Christian nationalism uses “crisis narratives” driven by visions of decline and apocalypse; decline from a mythical pristine American Christian past, and an ominous apocalyptic future foretold in scripture and incited by human rebellion against God.2 Their perception of cultural apocalypse as lived reality justified the ado…
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Featured image for “Orthodox, Holistic, and Organic: A review of the Introduction and final chapter of <em>Neo-Calvinism: A Theological Introduction</em>”
February 2, 2023
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Books

Orthodox, Holistic, and Organic: A review of the Introduction and final chapter of Neo-Calvinism: A Theological Introduction

by Gayle Doornbos
…, as it seeks to articulate a full-orbed account of God’s creation as unity-in-diversity. Drawing on contemporary scholarship on the organic motif in Bavinck, Sutanto and Brock claim that Neo-Calvinist theology “enfolds the organic language ubiquitous in Romantic philosophy into its own confessional Calvinism.”4 To those familiar with neo-Calvinism, one might be surprised that Brock and Sutanto’s introduction does not utilize “grace restores natur…
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Featured image for “Growing in Global Perspectives: A Book Conversation of <em>Reading the Bible Around the World</em>”
April 5, 2023
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Books

Growing in Global Perspectives: A Book Conversation of Reading the Bible Around the World

by Hannah Landman, Jaelyn Dragt, Eoghan Holdahl, Joya Schreurs, Susan Wang
…ller) and the imbalanced power causes violence in this world. This reading really opened my eyes to see that Christians are called to restore this broken world beyond the church or home and into a vast scope of policy and society. Hannah Landman   I am a native from Sioux Center, and we are having this conversation on Dordt’s campus. So, reading the chapter on diasporic approaches was definitely interesting for someone who has experienced little d…
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Featured image for “Rhetoric in the Worship and Witness of the Church: A Review of <em>Seasoned Speech</em>”
July 11, 2019
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Books

Rhetoric in the Worship and Witness of the Church: A Review of Seasoned Speech

by Scott Culpepper
…ularly her Gilead trilogy, serve to illustrate eunoia as dwelling place or community. Robinson fashions a rhetorical world in which her readers are able to join a community of souls wrestling with brokenness and blessing. Beitler links this tension between the brokenness and blessing of Christian communities with the celebration of Eastertide. In his final chapter, Beitler calls on the collective witness of his chosen examples to assert that Bakht…
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Featured image for “What if I Don’t Like My Job?”
April 27, 2016
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Essays

What if I Don’t Like My Job?

by Sarah Moss
…erating Approach to Finding God’s Will by Kevin De Young * Roadmap: The Get-It-Together Guide for Figuring Out What to Do with Your Life by Roadtrip Nation * What Color is your Parachute: A Practical Guide for Job-Hunters and Career-Changers (2016 Edition) by Richard Bolles ↩ At Dordt College, the Career Development Center is happy to provide résumé and cover letter help, job search strategies, connections, and more to current students as well as…
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Featured image for “For the Love of Mathematical Research: A Conversation with Undergraduate Research Students”
August 10, 2021
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Essays

For the Love of Mathematical Research: A Conversation with Undergraduate Research Students

by Mike Janssen
…confines of those rules. As I have researched mathematics, I discovered a freedom in realizing that I am capable of that research and exploration as well. Mathematicians from the past were simply curious people that repeatedly asked “Why?”, so we can take part in a small piece of their work by demonstrating that same curiosity. I look forward to continuing to take more mathematics classes with the perspective that I am not simply a student but a…
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Featured image for “Believing in Creation”
March 28, 2017
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Devotions

Believing in Creation

by Howard Schaap
…s a vision of new creation, of what will be. That brings me to Isaiah 41:14-20. The passage opens with God addressing his people memorably, as “worm Israel” and “little Israel”—strange terms of endearment that suggest this is written for Israel in exile, when God’s people are at their lowest of low points. He follows this up with promises of victory, or perhaps judgment upon the surrounding nations, in verses 15-16. It’s verses 17-20 where things…
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