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The Briefing

The Briefing

With ‘Coolest Job Ever’ Ending, Astronauts Seek Next Frontier… Technology Advances; Humans Supersize

What Must We Learn from the Bloodlands?: A Conversation with Historian Timothy Snyder

Interview with Timothy Snyder

Thinking in Public

April 25, 2011

(This is a rush transcript. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated)

The Briefing

The Briefing

Atheists Seek Chaplain Role in the Military… What the World Sees in America… A Bridge Under Scrutiny, by Plotters and the Police… In WikiLeaks’ Growth, Some Control Is Lost… Nation’s Mood at Lowest Level in Two Years, Poll Shows

Nero in Beijing — The Communist Party Declares War on Christians

The news out of China grows worse as reports of the arrest, detention, harassment, and beatings of Christians come from across China. The most publicized case thus far is the repeated oppression against a Beijing congregation that has led to numerous arrests and a crackdown within China’s capital.

The Briefing

The Briefing

Law Firm Won’t Defend Marriage Act… Gay Rights Group Contacted Law Firm’s Clients in Campaign to Intimidate DOMA’s Defenders… Tornado Season Intensifies, Without Clear Scientific Consensus on Why… U.S. Faces a Challenge in Trying to Punish Syria… Assad’s brutality in Syria

The Briefing

The Briefing

A Case for Hell… Film study: Men talk and women show skin

A Warning of Intimidations to Come

The defense of the Defense of Marriage Act [DOMA] got a little more complicated yesterday as the law firm that the House of Representatives had hired to defend the law withdrew from the case. As The New York Times stated bluntly, the firm dropped the case “amid pressure from gay rights groups.”

Thinking in Public

What Must We Learn from the Bloodlands?: A Conversation with Historian Timothy Snyder

Podcast Transcripts

The Briefing

The Briefing

Caesar in Beijing… 20th arrest in Indonesian bomb plot… Jesus replaced by eggs. Eggs replaced by spheres… Senator Ensign to Resign Amid Inquiry

“God’s True Vision of the Way Things Ought to Be?” — It’s Not Really About Same-Sex Marriage

The Douglas Boulevard Christian Church in Louisville has voted to stop performing legal marriages in light of Kentucky’s constitutional amendment outlawing same-sex marriages. As Peter Smith of The Courier-Journal [Louisville] reported:

Why Conservative Churches Are Growing: David Brooks and the Limits of Sociology

What sociology cannot do is deal with the most important question of all — the truth question.

John 3:1-15


Featured Posts

“Abortion is as American as Apple Pie” — The Culture of Death Finds a Voice

Abortion is now one of America’s most common surgical procedures performed on adults. As many as one out of three women will have at least one abortion. In some American neighborhoods, the number of abortions far exceeds the number of live births.

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Learning from Christopher Hitchens: Lessons Evangelicals Must Not Miss

The death of Christopher Hitchens on December 15 was not unexpected, and that seemed only to add to the tragedy.  His fight against cancer had been lived, like almost every other aspect of his colorful life, in full public view. He had told numerous interviewers that he wanted to die in an active, not a passive sense. Then again, there may never have been a truly passive moment in Christopher Hitchens’ life.

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President Obama and Same-Sex Marriage — The Dance Continues

Some predictions are rather safe to make. 2012 is almost certain to be a determinative year on the issue of same-sex marriage. Multiple courts appear poised to strike down the Defense of Marriage Act [DOMA] and, even more urgently, the appeal on California’s Proposition 8 at the Ninth Circuit U. S. Court of Appeals will set up a certain appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. Given the facts of this case and the significance of the nation’s most populous state, the Supreme Court is almost certain to take the case. This sets the stage for the courts to make some determinative statement on same-sex marriage within the next several months — a decision that will go a long way toward setting the direction of the larger culture.

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We’re All Harry Blackmun Now — The Lessons of Mississippi

Does a baby have to look like a baby to be recognized as a person?

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Other Websites

  • The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
  • Conventional Thinking