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Featured image for “Experiencing God’s Presence in the Life of Academia”
July 21, 2015
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Essays

Experiencing God’s Presence in the Life of Academia

by Benjamin Lappenga
…ived a cryptic email from one of my supervisors saying that although I had passed the exam, a face-to-face meeting was needed to discuss it. Since I was out of town, the meeting had to be put off for almost a month, during which time I became a disquieted wreck. Had I barely passed? Were there ongoing concerns about my proficiency in this area, which was supposedly a strength of mine? Whatever it was, something wasn’t perfect, and the insecurities…
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Featured image for “Stopping Slavery Before it Begins: Here’s What You Can Do”
January 8, 2016
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Essays

Stopping Slavery Before it Begins: Here’s What You Can Do

by Tala Strauss
…ime, our blood, our sweat, and our love. It may seem like a small thing to study for an exam or apply for a job, but it takes a thousand small steps to arrive at a glorious destination. There is nothing wrong with saying you are shocked and appalled by the existence of modern slavery. There is nothing wrong with telling other people about the devastating reality of slavery, and trying to “get the word out.” But if we are people of the Word, we are…
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Featured image for “How Should We Read the Bible?”
October 15, 2015
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Essays

How Should We Read the Bible?

by Benjamin Lappenga
…ters and from the early centuries of the faith).3 4. Embrace the fact that passages have a range of valid interpretations. If we read with Christians from other times and places, we encounter a range of interpretations — and this is good! Historic, orthodox Christianity has always believed that passages have multiple meanings — it was not until the rise of the historical-critical method in the late 17th century that interpreters began to look for…
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Featured image for “Redeeming Negative Emotion: a review of <em> The Power of Regret </em>”
May 11, 2022
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Books

Redeeming Negative Emotion: a review of The Power of Regret

by Donald Roth
…hrist our King, and regret teaches us to cry out for that. p. 8  ↩ https://www.scholastic.com/parents/family-life/social-emotional-learning/development-milestones/age-  ↩ https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=psalm+139&version=ESV  ↩ p. 55  ↩ https://worldregretsurvey.com  ↩ https://inallthings.org/american-christians-a-review-of-the-redemptive-self/  ↩…
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Featured image for “Institutional Stewardship and Ecology”
October 28, 2015
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Essays

Institutional Stewardship and Ecology

by Arlan Nederhoff
…lation costs. Second, by shifting the peak load, the college saves utility cost and the utility company delays construction of a new power plant, thereby reducing the environmental impact of the utility company. In both of these instances, we sought a balance between being environmentally conscientious and being fiscally responsible. However, the changes an institution can make to be more ecologically sensitive are not confined to major building p…
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Featured image for “Podcast: DRAMATIZING the Greatest Story with Kathryn Wehr”
March 15, 2023
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Podcast

Podcast: DRAMATIZING the Greatest Story with Kathryn Wehr

by Justin Ariel Bailey, Laurel Koerner
…tps://www.ivpress.com/the-man-born-to-be-king Listen to the plays: https://www.amazon.com/Man-Born-Be-King-Collection/dp/B09HSM8FJ9 Other works by Dorothy Sayers mentioned in the conversation Lord Peter Wimsey series (15 book series) Introduction and Translation of Dante’s Divine Comedy (Penguin classic) The Zeal of Thy House “The Mind of the Maker” “The Lost Tools of Learning” Other authors and books and authors mentioned in the conversation: Gin…
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Featured image for “Sanctification and Wild Things”
December 7, 2015
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Essays

Sanctification and Wild Things

by James Calvin Schaap
…eace of Wild Things When despair for the world grows in me and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief. I come into the presence of still water. And I feel above me the day-blind stars waiting with their li…
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Featured image for “Why Should Christians Care About Bitcoin?”
May 5, 2022
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Essays

Why Should Christians Care About Bitcoin?

by Jesse Veenstra
…y does see use in illegal activities, the narrative has been overstated. A comparison study between digital currency and fiat current used in illicit activities shows traditional fiat currency more widely used in criminal activity. In 2020, only 0.34% of cryptocurrency transactions were tied to illegal activity, compared to an estimate of 2-5% of fiat currency connected to illicit activity and money laundering. It would be unfair to criticize Bitc…
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Featured image for “Podcast: INTERPRETING Your World with Justin and the hosts of Hallway Conversations”
September 7, 2022
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Podcast

Podcast: INTERPRETING Your World with Justin and the hosts of Hallway Conversations

by Justin Ariel Bailey, Dave Mulder, Matthew Beimers, Abby De Groot
…line at hallwayconvospod@gmail.com.” Follow Dr. Dave Mulder’s substack: https://drdave.substack.com/ Follow Dr. Matthew Beimers: https://twitter.com/beim_m Follow Abby DeGroot: https://twitter.com/DeGrootAbby…
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Featured image for “People of Goodwill? Race, Lukewarm Acceptance, and the Christian Reformed Church”
May 18, 2017
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Essays

People of Goodwill? Race, Lukewarm Acceptance, and the Christian Reformed Church

by Mark T. Mulder
…35-356. ↩ Of course, it should also be noted that writing articles doesn’t cost much, either. ↩ One recent study has found the process of becoming more racially diverse can be correlated with decreasing congregation size. See Kevin D. Dougherty, Brandon C. Martinez, and Gerardo Martí; “Congregational Diversity and Attendance in a Mainline Protestant Denomination” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 54 (2016): 668-683. ↩ Glenn E. Bracey II…
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Featured image for “Top 5: Places to Visit”
June 24, 2022
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Culture

Top 5: Places to Visit

by Kayt Frisch, Donald Roth, Erin Olson, Ruth Clark
…s learning about the places we visit). If you have a 4th grader, print the free national park pass for your family1! 3. Visit people along the way – Long road trips are fun, but we have found joy in driving a route that includes a brief visit (meal or overnight stay) with friends or relatives. Kids enjoy meeting other friends, and adults enjoy a leisure meal conversation. Plus, it’s so fun to see other people’s local environments that they call ho…
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August 23, 2014
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Content Style Guide

by
…Gen. 1:1) Oxford Comma Use serial commas. Hyphens, en dashes, and em dashes The hyphen (-) connects two intimately related words, like “toll-free.” The en dash (–) connects two things distant from each other in time (“May–June issue”) or proper open compound words (“pre–Columbian”) The em dash (—) is more of a separator — it often works like parentheses — or to set off an afterthought closing a sentence. It can also be used as a blank to indicate…
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Featured image for “A Word Makes the Love Go ‘Round: A Review of <em>Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies</em>”
June 25, 2021
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Books

A Word Makes the Love Go ‘Round: A Review of Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies

by Bruce Kuiper
…tly-negative-effect-on-the-way-things-are-going-in-the-u-s-today/  ↩ https://fortune.com/2020/11/29/covid-19-news-coverage-us-negative-stories/  ↩ https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/crisis-earth/202104/do-americans-prefer-bad-news  ↩…
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Featured image for “Podcast: DISCERNING Cultural Wisdom & Foolishness with William Dyrness”
October 5, 2022
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Podcast

Podcast: DISCERNING Cultural Wisdom & Foolishness with William Dyrness

by Justin Ariel Bailey
The difference between cultural theology and public theology, and what he hopes culturally attuned theologians will give their attention to. Get Bill Dyrness’s new book, The Facts on the Ground: https://www.amazon.com/Facts-Ground-Wisdom-Theology-Culture/dp/1725299631 Get Bill’s earlier book, Poetic Theology: https://www.amazon.com/Poetic-Theology-Poetics-Everyday-Life/dp/080286578X…
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Featured image for “Unsung Holidays: Arbor Day”
April 27, 2023
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Culture

Unsung Holidays: Arbor Day

by April Fiet
…A friend of mine shared that the Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois once offered free admission to anyone who came dressed like a tree on Arbor Day. When she shared this story, I became curious about the namesake of the Arboretum. It turns out, J. Sterling Morton’s oldest son Joy moved west to Lisle, Illinois, founded the Morton Salt Company, and established the Morton Arboretum as a continuation of the Morton family motto “Plant Trees”3. Arbor…
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Featured image for “Guns in the US”
February 28, 2023
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Essays

Guns in the US

by Caleb Schut
…ve. Spending time in a country with a much healthier relationship with guns has made me hopeful for a future with less school and mass shootings and fewer gun deaths. A different world is possible, not just in the age to come but in this age.  https://www.britannica.com/event/Port-Arthur-Massacre  ↩ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Arthur_massacre_(Australia)  ↩ Guatemala, Mexico, and the United States are the only countries that name gun owners…
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Featured image for “Come Hell or High Water? Scientific Progress and Ethics”
October 14, 2016
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Essays

Come Hell or High Water? Scientific Progress and Ethics

by Travis Pickell
…man knowledge. Knowledge is presumed to be good, but sometimes its pursuit comes at an unacceptable cost. Lacking internal resources for distinguishing between “can” and “should,” science (and technology) will necessarily ignore these costs unless others stand in prophetic opposition to its relentless expansion.4 Science, being amoral (not immoral), needs moralists to say when it is prudent to tap the breaks. I think this is a flawed way of unders…
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Featured image for “Seeing the World Through the Eyes of Persecuted Christians”
May 19, 2015
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Essays

Seeing the World Through the Eyes of Persecuted Christians

by Joel Veldkamp
…etting people out of slavery in Sudan, medical treatment for victims of anti-Christian terrorism, and supporting Christian education in countries where Christian communities are threatened. Our main areas of work are Nigeria, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, South Sudan and India. Our website is www.csi-usa.org. Please e-mail me if you have any more questions about it: joel.veldkamp@gmail.com. Another good organization in Iraq specifically is the Ham…
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Featured image for “Wound Cleaning”
June 18, 2017
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Devotions

Wound Cleaning

by Rachel Reinink
…y specifically, Matthew 10:11-14. It says, “11Whatever town or village you enter, search there for some worthy person and stay at their house until you leave.12As you enter the home, give it your greeting.13If the home is deserving, let your peace rest on it; if it is not, let your peace return to you.14If anyone will not welcome you or listen to your words, leave that home or town and shake the dust off your feet.” I think Jesus is essentially te…
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Featured image for “Physics 101: Observing Physical Creation”
September 20, 2016
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Essays

Physics 101: Observing Physical Creation

by Kayt Frisch
…his is the wonder and glory of God’s Creation, seen through the methodical study of the physical universe. These examples are a small sample across the breadth and depth of the physical Creation, seeing the work of our Creator through the methodical study of the physical universe that we call physics. So what is physics? Certainly “equations” are part of the story, but at its heart, physics is about observing the Created Universe and saying “I won…
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Featured image for “The Shared Virtues of Science and Faith: A Review of <em>Why Science and Faith Need Each Other</em>”
March 11, 2021
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Books

The Shared Virtues of Science and Faith: A Review of Why Science and Faith Need Each Other

by Channon Visscher
…work and seeks to demonstrate that science and religion can, in fact, find common ground to complement each other in constructive and beautiful ways. This is no small claim in light of the persistent (if inaccurate) cultural narrative of conflict noted above. Moreover, the reality is that areas of conflict and tension between science and religion do exist, even if the relationship is not defined by them. In such areas of tension, how might people…
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Featured image for “The Now and the Not Yet: A Review of <em> The Art of New Creation </em>”
June 27, 2022
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Books

The Now and the Not Yet: A Review of The Art of New Creation

by Justin Ariel Bailey
…an artist and the theme of creation and new creation? – How does your work offer “good news” to our broken world today? – In one sentence, how would you describe your vocation as an artist? Artists nurture our imagination, shift our perspectives, open new possibilities, and teach us to pay attention. I am thankful for their work, and for the work of others who are listening for resonance with the now-and-not-yet new creation. p. 2  ↩ p. 102-121  ↩…
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Featured image for “Podcast: UPDATING Calvinism for the Modern World with Cory Brock and Gray Sutanto”
February 1, 2023
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Podcast

Podcast: UPDATING Calvinism for the Modern World with Cory Brock and Gray Sutanto

by Justin Ariel Bailey, Jessica Joustra
…evel in your own lives. I know that in the past I’ve been a part of church communities, for example, where we decided to go and plant a church in another part of the world. And in order to do that, the decision was to take the book of church order, the form of how a church ought to be and function in the most circumstantial ways and translate that to the language of the culture that we were going to. That means that the new culture needs to meet i…
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Featured image for “The Long Invisible Bag”
January 13, 2015
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Essays

The Long Invisible Bag

by Chuck DeGroat
…because sin is real. My sin is real. And because I desperately need grace. Opening that invisible bag, we find that we’re far more complex and broken than we think we are. But at its bottom, we find the end of ourselves, and the beginning of hope. At the bottom of that burdening bag we find a humiliated Savior, a Savior who is not at all ashamed to meet us there, who is not at all afraid of our ‘stuff’. And where we feel like life might end in dep…
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Featured image for “Cultural Learners: Dordt Students Reflect on Off-Campus Studies ”
May 25, 2022
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Culture

Cultural Learners: Dordt Students Reflect on Off-Campus Studies 

by Daniel Moe, Morgan Stoltzfus, Caden Zonnefeld
…gh the centuries-old libraries and cobblestone streets, I knew I wanted to come back and study at the same desks that generations of scientists, politicians, and theologians had sat at before me. Looking back, my semester at Oxford has proved to be one of the most formational spiritual experiences of my life. First, the semester was a lesson in trusting God’s providence. While I was flying over the Atlantic, the United Kingdom imposed a new nation…
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