by David Kerrigan | Sep 12, 2012 | Opinion
In recent years, a number of cases in Great Britain have gone to court involving Christians who claim they have been victims of discrimination. Often the decisions against these Christians have been upheld, the cumulative effect of which has been to give rise to the...
by David Kerrigan | Aug 22, 2012 | Opinion
One of the wonderful conversations in C S Lewis’ “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” is when Mr. Beaver speaks of Aslan, describing the Lion as “the King of the wood, the son of the great emperor-beyond-the-sea and the King of the...
by David Kerrigan | Jun 18, 2012 | Opinion
So why do faith and science often seem in conflict? For centuries a Christian commitment to the natural sciences has been rooted in the Bible, and a theology that argues that God is discernible in and through the cosmos he has created (Psalm 19:1; Romans 1:19)....
by David Kerrigan | Mar 22, 2012 | Opinion
Editor’s note: This column is another of several EthicsDaily.com will carry from an initiative from Great Britain called “Beyond400.net – Baptists Imagining Life After 400 Years.” On a cold but sunny afternoon recently, I found myself at Arlington...
by David Kerrigan | Oct 27, 2011 | Opinion
Visiting UrbanExpression teams in Manchester, England, recently, we found ourselves in somewhat unusual surroundings. In the space of eight hours, we visited a children’s center, a supermarket, the Rampant Lion pub, walked round a local estate and finally...