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October 27, 2014
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Lee v. Weisman (1992)

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…vertheless, Deborah Weisman and her parents filed suit against the school, arguing that the school prayer was a violation of the separation of church and state because it still essentially compelled students to participate in a religious exercise. By a 5-4 vote, the Supreme Court agreed with this assertion. Read more about this case here….
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Featured image for “Living Alongside, with Open Hands”
February 22, 2017
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Devotions

Living Alongside, with Open Hands

by Sarah Bixler
…s, my husband and I have encountered increasingly diverse neighbors in the communities where we’ve lived. We now display a sign created by our friend that reads, “No matter where you are from, we’re glad you’re our neighbor” in three languages. When we recently visited the town where we spent our initial years of marriage, we passed our neighbor Evelyn’s house and I remembered her kindness in loaning me those cake pans. Her small act of generosity…
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Featured image for “Estate Planning:  Psalms and Hymns for a Lifetime”
May 10, 2018
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Essays

Estate Planning: Psalms and Hymns for a Lifetime

by Karen A. DeMol
…Christian worship: the longing and sense of mystery of the middle ages (“O Come, O Come Immanuel”), the sturdy faith statements of the Protestant Reformation (“A Mighty Fortress Is Our God”), the devotion of the 18th century revival in England (the Wesleys’ “O, For a Thousand Tongues to Sing”) and the United States (Isaac Watts’ “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross”). The words of hymn-writers from past times and other places provide us with rich con…
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Featured image for “Loving God Through… Sex?”
February 4, 2016
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Essays

Loving God Through… Sex?

by Neal DeRoo
…omething of God (or some other spirit) at work in our lives, and therefore communicate something of God (or some other spirit) to those we come in contact with. Does our sexuality show God’s love to other people and to ourselves? If someone was paying attention to the sexual elements of my life, would they come away from that with a sense that I love God and God’s creation — or would they find that I love only myself or that I find God’s creation…
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Featured image for “Movie Review: <em>John Wick: Chapter 3—Parabellum</em>”
May 31, 2019
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Culture

Movie Review: John Wick: Chapter 3—Parabellum

by Josh Matthews
…s and wear brands that give them “safe passage.” They seek “parley” when a combat stalemate occurs. Topping all of this is the character of the “Adjudicator” (Asia Kate Dillon), perfectly cast as the enforcer of a system of rules that all of the characters not only know by heart, but hold as sacred and inviolable. For example, at one point Wick, chased by an assassin, crashes onto the steps of the Continental Hotel. He puts his hand on the bottom…
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Featured image for “God, Human Nature, and Psychology”
November 6, 2015
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Essays

God, Human Nature, and Psychology

by Mark Christians
…ur work as Christians when he says, “Psychology, then, in the Christian framework, is not an independent activity that operates apart from God; it is dependent upon God’s mercy to illuminate human understanding and reveal things about human nature through human reflection, research, and creative insight.”1 May our reflection, research, and insight lead us to a greater knowledge of God. Johnson, E. L. (2007). Christ, the Lord of psychology. In Psyc…
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Featured image for “It Is Up To You”
February 15, 2016
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Essays

It Is Up To You

by Kate Vander Veen
…hese?) is based in something that warrants appraisal. Contentment does not come easy, but it will come, if sought. Social health goes hand in hand with emotional health. As human beings, we were created to be in relationship not only with God and his creation that surrounds us, but also the multitude of human beings with whom we interact. Just as you were wonderfully made, so were the many others on this plant. Clearly each of us has strengths and…
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Featured image for “No Room for Apathy: A Review of <em>Executing Grace</em>”
April 18, 2019
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Books

No Room for Apathy: A Review of Executing Grace

by Kathryn Post
…overlooked by contemporary Christians. Claiborne goes on to painstakingly examine the gut-wrenching legacy of lynching and its connection to capital punishment. He argues that the death penalty occurs primarily in places where lynching was commonplace, and that it replaced lynching as the main method used to kill people of color in the United States. He also writes that the murder of black people by all-white mobs is echoed in the all-too-common…
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December 17, 2020
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Books

2020 Top Books

by Emily Rowe
…ustly theological analysis.” The Myth of the American Dream: Reflections on Affluence, Autonomy, Safety and Power by D.L. Mayfield (Read iAt’s Review here) When Narcissism Comes to Church: Healing Your Community from Emotional and Spiritual Abuse by Chuck De Groat (Read iAt’s Review here)…
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Featured image for “Suffering, Double Negatives, and the Friday We Call ‘Good’”
March 30, 2018
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Essays

Suffering, Double Negatives, and the Friday We Call ‘Good’

by Howard Schaap
…ering must necessarily consider where these “bad or unpleasant” somethings come from. However, we must always consider suffering through concrete examples—or so it seems to me—in order to keep this from being a merely academic exercise. When I think of suffering and its origins, I think of my aunt Marie, who as a young woman was “subjected to” polio. Recently, I saw pictures of Marie in her youth, when she was a thin young girl dating my uncle Ber…
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Featured image for “The Mars Rover, the Power of the Particular, and Love”
May 1, 2017
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Essays

The Mars Rover, the Power of the Particular, and Love

by Aleisa Dornbierer-Schat
…eded to touch each part of my cold face, name it, and softly pronounce it “freezing.” “Nose. Freezing.” “Cheek. Freezing.” “Mouth. Freezing.” Then he began again, touching his nose, then my nose. His cheek, then my cheek. He wore a puzzled half-smile, and I could see him confronting, in his tiny, two-year-old mind, that deep and abiding mystery of human identity: we are the same; we are different. It’s rare, in the middle of a frenzied morning, th…
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Featured image for “God Provides”
August 3, 2017
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Devotions

God Provides

by Daniel Vos
…ticular, see CD III/IV.17 and V.14). The ordinary things that we do as the community of faith are the ordinary means by which God’s saving grace becomes known. Thus, as Paul can say in 1 Corinthians 3:6, “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.” Or, in the words of the Canons of Dort: “Just as the almighty work of God by which he brings forth and sustains our natural life does not rule out but requires the use of means, by which God,…
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Featured image for “Our Fiscal Policy Response to the COVID Crisis”
May 12, 2020
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Essays

Our Fiscal Policy Response to the COVID Crisis

by John Visser
…coupled with new evidence that government was willing to bail out private companies led companies to pile on cheap debt and repurchase stock, encouraging a stock market bubble. Debt was never lowered, it just shifted it from one sector to another. Now the government is saddled with debt when the prospects for the economic growth needed to pay down that debt look more unlikely than ever, in part because debt-laden rescue programs prevent the rebal…
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Featured image for “Seeking Peace Amidst Dissension: How the Church Can be Both Diverse and One”
March 18, 2016
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Essays

Seeking Peace Amidst Dissension: How the Church Can be Both Diverse and One

by Monica Schaap Pierce
…and even interpret the Bible differently? I think there is, as long as we commit to listening, openness, compassion, respect, hope, and prayer. The Spirit of diversity and unity goes with us in this endeavor—whether at work, home, or church—empowering us through our gifts and urging us toward the fulfillment of Christ’s prayer that we “all may be one.”6 David Brooks, New York Times, Feb. 9, 2016. ↩ Acts 2:4-11 ↩ Romans 12:6-8 and 1 Corinthians 12…
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Featured image for “How Not to Help Your Friends Find a Spouse”
August 24, 2016
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Essays

How Not to Help Your Friends Find a Spouse

by Adam Adams
…r a way to continue my studies in graduate school, and live near her. This search proved futile. In a profound example of what it looks like for a family to love the singles in their life, her father told me, “Adam, we love you, and we love our daughter. We know you have a decision to make, and we want you to know whatever you decide, we love you.” In time, it became clear our relationship should end, and each of us moved into the next stages of o…
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February 12, 2015
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Essays

The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance

by Bob De Smith
…ious actions are one (and live performance and life itself converge in one compelling moment on stage for Riggan). Could the director be suggesting that art is a means for examining life? Or that the stories we tell and the lives we live can hardly be separated? If so, the fact that we are watching actors present a scene (a Shakespearian device!) reminds us that we are part of the drama as well. We are invited to see ourselves on stage (rather, on…
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Featured image for “God’s Voice in Disruptions”
October 11, 2022
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Essays

God’s Voice in Disruptions

by Caleb Schut
…iety in me. My impulse is to fill the vacuum with whatever work happens to come my way. “Before I can tell my life what I want to do with it, I must listen to my life telling me who I am…” Parker Palmer Christians don’t just believe in work, we believe in vocation. It’s a word you’ll hear in secular environments, but it’s a theological word. It comes from Latin, vocare, which is the verb form of “to call.” It is a part of our lexicon because Chris…
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Featured image for “Hide and Seek”
March 6, 2017
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Devotions

Hide and Seek

by Liz Moss
…the game, Hide-and-Seek. For him, it is a one sided game. He hides and we search. He crawls under a chair. We call his name. He covers himself under a blanket. We look for his little toes to peak out. What he likes most in his little game is not the hiding–although he seems to do it quite well. Instead, what thrills him the most is being found. Loud squeals and energizing cheers will exude him. Joy will envelope him. His dimpled smile will overta…
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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 17-20 where things get freaky as far as nature goes. “The poor and needy search for water,” this section begins, “but there is none.” The “poor and needy” here are probably the same as “worm Israel”: that is, Israel in exile. However, the promises God makes for these thirsty people sound a lot like the lion and the lamb passage, like new creation, by pairing things we don’t usually think of together: desert and water. “I will make rivers flow on…
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Featured image for “Psalm 139: on the Embodiment of Good and Evil”
September 7, 2021
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Essays

Psalm 139: on the Embodiment of Good and Evil

by Chandra Crane
…dei that we bear in all its nuance and grace. We also must pray for God to search and correct us when we are not seeing each other and ourselves in our fullness. Throughout human history, violence has come when human beings lose sight of the imago dei which bestows inherent worth and dignity in every person. It is far too easy to justify abuse, injustice, and cruelty toward another when we willfully forget that everyone has been made in the image…
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January 11, 2016
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Essays

Explorers and Immigrants

by Nathan Tintle
…ar-off lands for unique experiences, knowing that we’ll soon return to our comfortable homes. Or, we go to a new restaurant and try a new food, knowing we can have comfortable, well-known food at home tomorrow. But, lurking beneath the surface of familiarity in our Western world is a wildness aching to be challenged, pushed into new frontiers and out of our comfortable, well-trodden boxes. A wildness put into our soul by God in order to understand…
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Featured image for “For the ‘gram: A Review of <em> Share </em>”
June 15, 2023
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Books

For the ‘gram: A Review of Share

by Rylan Brue
…reminder for oatmeal eating seminarians too. Although there is a pantry of common ingredients, there’s no strict recipe for becoming a saint. You know one when you see one, of course, and when you see a beautiful life, you can’t help but want to try and make one for yourself too. There too, as with anything, hunger remains the best spice.6 pg. 3  ↩ pg. 2  ↩ pg. 2  ↩ “For the ‘gram” title of this review is a social media reference to Instagram (als…
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Featured image for “Where is Peace on Earth?”
December 15, 2015
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Essays

Where is Peace on Earth?

by April Fiet
…in the presence of God’s messenger. Peace to Mary and Joseph who had been searching for shelter to no avail. Peace to a world where Caesar was counting all his people to show his strength. Peace to those who would soon have to live in fear of Herod’s order that all boys under the age of two be killed. How can there be peace in moments like these? Where can we find peace on earth when everything seems to be falling apart? The heavenly host praised…
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Featured image for “The Lord is Our Light”
January 20, 2017
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Devotions

The Lord is Our Light

by Katlyn DeVries
…the shelf, she too winds through the trees, calling, shining her light in search of her sweet child. Light bounces off the great white birch, revealing the girl, huddled and alone. For all her searching in the dark, she couldn’t see the light from the windows. She couldn’t move for fear of falling. The mother scoops her child up in a tender hug. Flashlight beams light their path as they head for home, hand in hand. Truly, the LORD is our light an…
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August 20, 2014
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Markup Guide for Basic HTML

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…ng semantic structure of your web pages to understand their content. So do computers and search engines. CSS stands for Cascading Style Sheets. The CSS styles for your site describe to the browser how HTML elements will should look (sizes, positions, and ornamentation) and also how they should behave under different conditions — like on different types of screens and as people interact with them. Using CSS we can make any content and HTML markup l…
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