Pornography, simulated or actual, visual or literary, filmed or photographed, is a stench in our culture that not only debases and desensitizes, but worse.
Scan a crowd of Republicans, and a significant majority of those you see will be white. While in itself this is innocuous, it is also unrepresentative of American demographics.
A new Pew Research study documents that “Fully 20 percent of Americans said they had shared their religious faith on social networking websites or apps (such as Facebook and Twitter) in the past week.
Let’s pray for our leaders, support them when they’re right, oppose them (with both grace and truth) when they’re wrong, advance “faith, family and freedom” in public life, and stand always for the truth.
Pornography, human trafficking, abortion, sexually-transmitted disease, and prostitution are polluted streams pouring into the cesspool of human pain. What can concerned Christians do?
The majority of readers of this site do not care for Barack Obama’s presidency. Yet Christians are not given the option of letting their disagreement with their political leaders prevent them from praying for those leaders.
Critics of the CCSS raise a number of key concerns. However, there is one primary issue that must not be lost in the discussion: The federal government’s role in education.