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Home/Lifestyle

Virtue Rewarded, Beauty and the Beast, and 50 Shades

Is beauty rewarded by the ability to overlook evil, and then to reform it by our own virtue?

Written by Aimee Byrd | Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Is it too far of a jump then to suggest that the popularity of 50 Shades may be a reaction to the history of a woman’s sexuality, and an outright playing out of the premise of it’s bondage? Even the names, Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey, give the all too familiar plot away. Here the heroine woman is no virgin, but we still find her exchanging her sexuality in a contract, played out in a detailed dominant/submissive relationship, as it overcomes the man who professes his love to her and marries her. Anastasia wins the title of a wife.

The Shoddiness of The Shack

The Shack really is an explicit effort to offer Christians a new vision of God beyond that presented by a traditional, orthodox reading of the Bible.

Written by Michael LeFebvre | Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Does William Young really intend to replace the historic vision of God and salvation with a new picture, or is this review simply nitpicking? At countless points throughout the story, we find Mack amazed at what he is learning. The reason is because this vision of God is so very different from everything Mack used to think about God: the things he learned, for instance, in family catechism as a boy (p. 107) and in seminary as a young man (pp. 9, 65, 198). This constant refrain on Mack’s “retraining” is significant, because it tells us that the author knows he is confronting us with a new vision of God to replace the one we grew up with.

The Untold Story of America’s Most Prolific Serial Killer

The grand jury report is as startling, as nauseating as any you’ll ever read

Written by Tim Challies | Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Gosnell ran a Philadelphia abortion clinic that specialized in low-income and immigrant clientele. Over twenty years he carried out countless thousands of abortions but did so in conditions that were nothing short of appalling.   The grand jury report is as startling, as nauseating as any you’ll ever read. “This case is about a doctor... Continue Reading

Facing Death & Finding Life – Fanny Crosby

Fanny Crosby (1820-1915) is the prominent blind hymnwriter of the nineteenth century

Written by Vance Christie | Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Twice when the invitation was given at the close of the service, she went forward, seeking peace from her inner spiritual struggles, but found none. Finally on November 20 she went to the altar alone. As she prayed, the congregation began to sing Isaac Watts’ grand old hymn, “Alas! and Did My Savior Bleed?”  ... Continue Reading

The Three Uses of the Law (Luther’s Catechism)

Here’s a great Reformation treatment on the purposes (or uses) of God’s law.

Written by Shane Lems | Friday, March 10, 2017

This Q/A can be found in Luther’s Small Catechism with Explanation (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1991). As I’ve mentioned here before, this is a sweet little hardcover book that goes through the basics of the Lutheran side of Reformation theology. Even though I disagree with some aspects of Lutheran theology, this book is a great one to own and read.

Lights, Camera … Word Bomb!

Hollywood continues to litter its films with violent language

Written by John R. Erickson | Thursday, March 9, 2017

I think violent language is bad for my health—my physical, spiritual, and emotional health. The words we’re talking about are weaponized, loaded with anger, and their intent is to smash and incite. Are we supposed to believe that weaponized language has no effect on an audience that hears it over and over?   I don’t... Continue Reading

Science Is a Religious Endeavor

'The Penultimate Curiosity' is unintentionally about more than the relation between science and religion

Written by Mitch Stokes | Thursday, March 9, 2017

“The authors describe a number of disquieting discoveries made in the 19th century—ones we’re still struggling to reconcile with Christianity. There were, for example, findings that resulted in Darwin’s theory of evolution, as well as geological discoveries that suggested the earth to be far older than the Bible seemed to imply.”   Roger Wagner and Andrew Briggs—an... Continue Reading

Disney Introduces a Gay Character in Beauty and the Beast: Six Reflections

Regardless of our personal thoughts on why Disney did this, we should not miss the larger cultural indicator this movie represents.

Written by Sean McDowell | Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Entertainment is a powerful form of persuasion. We must not forget how powerfully movies and other forms of entertainment shape how people think about the world. And they especially influence young people, which is the target audience for this new film. As John Stonestreet and I lay out in our book Same-Sex Marriage, the largest forces that have shaped how our culture views marriage and sexuality are such as shows like Will & Grace and Modern Family.

Affliction’s Benefits (Watson)

Thomas Watson, in All Things for Good, lists several ways how affliction works for the good of God’s people

Written by Shane Lems | Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Afflictions help loosen our grip on the world. When you dig away the dirt from the root of a tree, it is to loosen the tree from the earth. So God digs away our earthly comforts to loosen our hearts from the world.

“Beauty and the Beast” to Feature An “Exclusively Gay Moment”

Gaston’s sidekick LeFou will be involved in a subplot in which he is wrestling with his sexuality

Written by Denny Burk | Tuesday, March 7, 2017

“Disney has put me and many other parents like me in the position of having to explain to very small children why this movie is bad for them. But we will do it. And we will use it as a teachable moment about the true story of the world—a story in which we are strangers... Continue Reading

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