晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023

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  • The Good Book Blog

    Octavio Esqueda — 

    En el 2006, Ken Ferraro, un profesor de sociolog鱈a de la universidad Purdue public坦 un interesante art鱈culo en la revista especializada Journal for the Scientific Study of Religi坦n en el que reportaba los resultados de su investigaci坦n acerca de la relaci坦n entre la religi坦n y el 鱈ndice de masa corporal. En su estudio, Ferraro descubri坦 que s鱈 existe una relaci坦n entre algunas religiones y la tendencia de sus miembros para ser obesos. Lamentablemente, los cristianos tienen la masa corporal m叩s alta y los bautistas, en particular son los m叩s obesos en los Estados Unidos. De hecho, cerca del 27 por ciento de los bautistas son obesos y, por lo tanto, el grupo religioso con mayor sobrepeso en un gran contraste con religiones no cristianas como la jud鱈a, musulmana y budista donde menos del uno por ciento de sus miembros son obesos ...

  • 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 News

    Men's Soccer Serves In Japan

    The men's soccer team took a 12-day service trip to Japan.

    Neil Morgan — 

    Photos (courtesy Gil Mellis) LA MIRADA, Calif. --- 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 Men's Soccer had the opportunity to take 12 days from its busy preseason schedule to...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    The dialogue between Michael and Jim continues: Jim: Maybe we should talk about sin today. Michael: That sounds like a good way to mess up a nice morning Jim: At least its a useful subject. Michael: Im not so sure about that. Jim: Maybe it would be good to try. Michael: OK, if you insist ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Freddy Cardoza — 

    As we consider doing personal discipleship, who we disciple is an important factor. It's important to keep in mind that who God might have you disciple may not be the ideal candidate at first glance ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    William Lane Craig — 

    Dr. WIlliam Lane Craig, On October 21, 2013, you responded to a question by a lifelong Christian who said they were having trouble believing because of reading material from people like Richard Dawkins, and from discussions they had with their atheist friends (http://www.reasonablefaith.org/garbage-in-garbage-out). You chided this person (and other Christians like them) very strongly for the "cavalier way" that they "expose themselves to material which is potentially destructive to them." ... ... Personally, I don't understand what the value is of asking questions is, if you consider anyone who doesn't agree with the answers you already have to be "the wrong people." But that's not my main point. I'm more concerned about that first sentence, which sounds more like something you might hear from an imam of ISIS than a prominent Christian philosopher, who believes so strongly that Christianity is a reasonable faith. If Christianity truly is consistent with reality itself, then shouldn't it hold up to scrutiny? ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    The dialogue between Michael and Jim continues: Michael: You said that the issue is whether the world determines the look of our lives, or whether the Bible determines it. Jim: Sometimes, biblical truths look extreme to us because were using the values of the world as our yardstick. Michael: So you think we should all be fools for Jesus. You think that we all need to make a decision to live radical, cut-loose lives for Jesus. Right? Jim: Right. Michael: I thought you said that the Lord has been teaching you about balance recently ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Doug Geivett — 

    On April 25, 1967, the church lost a great Christian philosopher and apologist named Edward John Carnell. He was almost 48 years old. Today marks the 48th anniversary of his death. He was a graduate of Wheaton College and of Westminster Theological Seminary. He later earned doctoral degrees in theology and philosophy, at Harvard Divinity School and Boston University, respectively ...

  • 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 News

    晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 Welcomes Athletes for Special Olympics World Games Los Angeles 2015

    Hundreds of athletes enjoy an afternoon of food and festivities on 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023's campus

    Staff — 

    On July 22, nearly 400 special olympics athletes were welcomed to the United States at a special event hosted by 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023. The 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    The dialogue between Michael and Jim continues: Michael: Do you remember last weekone of the final things you said to me was, I hope that youre able to take hold of the life that the Lord has planned for you? I think I responded with an I hope so, too. Ive been thinking about this all week and I have another question I want to talk about. This ones really nagging me. Jim: Shoot. Michael: Dont start that again! Jim: OK. Michael: Do we ever actually get what were seeking? Were told many times in the Bible that were supposed to seek the Lord. Is the Christian life all seeking, or is there any finding involved? ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    William Lane Craig — 

    Dear Dr. Craig I am Samuel, I am 20 years old, and I am currently studying for a science degree in Biology and Chemistry at the university of Malta. An argument which was brought up by my Atheist friend, which is currently studying physics and Chemistry, regarding the origins of the universe. My friend argued that because there was no time prior to the big bang, therefore there was no causal relation involved, because causes require time in order to occur. My response was that this thus implies a cause which transcends time, and I brought up an analogy to help explain it. I said that when a writer writes a story, the cause of the story goes beyond the reality of story timeline. But that does not mean that the story timeline lacks a cause because the cause didn't happen within the parameters of the story's reality. Anyway, my friend was not convinced, so I wanted to see how you would respond to such an argument. Does the universe have a cause, even when time didn't even exist prior the big bang? ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    The dialogue between Michael and Jim continues: Jim: Havent you noticed that some preachers concentrate on themes of forsaking all to follow Christ, personal discipline, faithfulness in prayer, radical discipleship, the lordship of Christ, and the like, while others exhort us to let go of our self-reliance and learn about the inner joys of the life that God offers? Michael: Ive never really though of it that way, but youre right. Jim: Which should they be preaching? Michael: Im not sure. Jim: Ive got a theory ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Doug Geivett — 

    Arnold Lunn was born to a Methodist minister, but he was himself agnostic and a critic of Christianityuntil he was 45 years old, when he converted to the faith. Lunn died on June 2, 1974. Lunn was a professional skier and full-time enthusiast. He founded the Alpine Ski Club and the Kandahar Ski Club. He brought slalom skiing to the racing world, and hes the namesake for a double black diamond ski trail at Taos Ski Valley. Lunn credited his agnosticism to the wholly unconvincing cause of Anglicanism. He looked in vain for persuasive arguments for the existence of God and the truth of Christianity. Later he would say that an odd hour or two at the end of a boys school life might not be unprofitably spend in armouring him against the half-baked dupes of ill informed secularists (The Third Day, xvii). He wrote in criticism of the faith and debated Christianitys prominent defenders ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    The dialogue between Michael and Jim continues: Michael: But isnt there any way that I can have the joy and peace of the Christian life without the necessity of suffering, pain and personal discipline? Jim: You want to have your cake and eat it too? Michael: Thats not what I mean. Jim: What do you mean? Michael: What about all those people who talk about the peace and joy they experience as Christians? Their lives dont seem to be all that difficult. Perhaps I should aim at that type of life ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kevin Lawson — 

    This is the third in a series of four blogs on Jos辿 Bowens book, Teaching Naked: How Moving Technology Out of Your College Classroom Will Improve Student Learning (Jossey-Bass, 2012). I shared in my first blog that his main thrust was for teachers to use technology to deliver content outside of class sessions and shift the use of class time to processing that information, promoting critical thinking and the application of knowledge to real life situations. There are three ideas from Bowens work that I think have the potential of deepening the impact of our teaching in the church. In my second blog, I put the focus on his first idea, finding ways to use technology to provide content to group members, preparing them for active learning in your Bible study group. In this blog, I want to focus on how to use your class time to help students in processing and applying the content of the Scripture you are studying together.

  • The Good Book Blog

    William Lane Craig — 

    Hello Dr. Craig, With the recent Supreme court decision regarding same sex marriage I reread some of your Q/A response regarding homosexuality. In a question regarding the connection between interracial marriage and same sex marriage you said "Once we start down that route, anything goes: a man and two women, a man and a child, two men and a goat, etc. I see no reason at all to start down that road." with regards to same sex marriage. My question is does this statement constitute a slippery slope fallacy? My concern is that non believers would easily dismiss it ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    Two men in their in their late 20s walk into a coffee shop around 7:00 a.m. In college they had been good friends, but over the past few years had gotten out of touch. Having lived in the same dormitory for three of their four years at City Christian College, they still had many fondand a few not-so-fond memoriesof their time together in college. Just by accident (or so Michael thought) they had run into each other in a hardware store about three weeks before, and had set up a time to talk over breakfast. Jim thought of their accidental meeting as a divine appointment. He considered any accidental meeting to be a divine appointment ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Doug Geivett — 

    Born in 1861, W. H. Griffith Thomas died on June 2, 1924. His greatest and most sophisticated work is his book The Principles of Theology, a commentary on the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church. But one short and reader-friendly book that should interest students of Christian apologetics is How We Got Our Bible ...

  • 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 News

    Natasha Jackson Back At Her Best

    Despite an injury that occurred less than a year ago, Jackson is back to medaling.

    Neil Morgan — 

    CALGARY, Alberta --- It's been a trying year for 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 Hall of Famer Natasha Jackson. It was one that pushed her to the edge of what she can...

  • 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 News

    晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 named a 2015 Great College to Work For

    University makes Honor Roll of Chronicle of Higher Education list

    Jenna Loumagne — 

    晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 is one of the nations 86 best colleges to work for, according to a newly released survey by The Chronicle of Higher Education....

  • The Good Book Blog

    William Lane Craig — 

    Dr. Craig, My name is Tejas and I'm 13 years old. I admire you and have watched many of your debates. I sincerely request you to answer this question, and thank you for taking your time to read this. My question regards the Kalam Cosmological Argument, that I have seen you present in some debates. The first part is, is the initial premise on causation refuted if the zero-energy universe hypothesis is true, and what would be the flaws if the universe were a vacuum fluctuation? And regarding the second premise, could you please tell me why you think the presentism ontology of time is true? ...

  • 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 News

    晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 Leads NAIA In Scholar Teams

    For the second year in a row 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 has most teams with academic honors.

    Neil Morgan — 

    For the fourth time in six years 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023 leads the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) in Scholar Teams. The Eagles...

  • The Good Book Blog

    Doug Geivett — 

    S淡ren Kierkegaard was born May 5, 1813, in Copenhagen, Denmark. Hes been called a Christian existentialist, a fideist, a satirist, and the melancholy Dane. He was concerned about the disconnect between Christian profession and the lived reality of true Christianity. He called his contemporaries to a deeper personal encounter with God. And he wrote with penetrating insight about the failure of the purely aesthetic lifewhat we today might call secularismwhich seeks pleasure without discerning its natural and ultimate end, namely, despair. Kierkegaards contribution is considerable, even for the evidentialist. In fact, his sermonic style may be of value to the apologist who insists on the value of evidence. E. J. Carnell, mid-twentieth century, did the most to bring Kierkegaards insight into an overall combinationalist approach to apologetics. Carnell wrote: There can be no question that S淡ren Kierkegaard gave a profoundly convincing defense of the third locus of truth.

  • The Good Book Blog

    Kenneth Berding — 

    Recent English Bible translators have increasingly opted to translate the Greek word peripateo, whenever it is used metaphorically to describe ones way of life, with the English word live. The other option at translators disposal is to retain the metaphor and translate it into English as walk. The motivation for the decision to translate with the word live instead of walk, apparently, is the fear that readers might not grasp the metaphor, and thus might either interpret verses that employ the metaphor literalistically (describing the manner in which you put one foot in front of the other), or, more likely, that readers might simply find themselves confused by the metaphor. Let me show you some verses from Ephesians 4-5 where this matters, comparing the English Standard Version and the New American Standard Bible, both of which tend to use walk in such contexts with the New International Version and New Living Translation, both of which tend to use live (or something similar). Then let me offer a critique.

  • The Good Book Blog

    The Good Book Blog — 

    Adam Johnson (assistant professor at 晩晩当際際夊消消夊2023s Torrey Honors Institute (01, M.A. 07)) recently released Atonement: A Guide for the Perplexed. To learn more about this book, we asked Adam a few questions ...

  • The Good Book Blog

    William Lane Craig — 

    Hello Dr. Craig! First of all, I would like to thank you for your work in the Kingdom of God. It has literally changed my life. I recently rededicated my life to Jesus Christ because of the ministry and power that He has bestowed upon you. I was watching your debate with Paul Draper yesterday and have had nagging questions about consciousness since then. I believe myself to be a dualistic interactionist, and I believe the brain is an instrument with which the soul interacts with physical reality. However, I am struggling with a few things: Does someone afflicted with Alzheimer's disease in anyway disprove the existence of a soul? There personality can change as their brain begins to deteriorate. I had surgery as a teenager and when I was anesthetized all I remember was waking up. Did my soul linger around my body while I was knocked out? Why can't I remember anything during the time of being unconscious? Are we the only creatures on planet Earth with a soul? I have heard Hank Hanegraff mention that he believes in different types of souls that God may have imbued animals with ...