by Mitch Randall | Mar 1, 2018 | Opinion
John Smyth and Thomas Helwys fled England for Holland at the beginning of the 17th century. Migrating across the English Channel, Smyth and Helwys arrived on the shores of Holland as hopeful immigrants seeking to follow their conscience, practice their faith and...
by Martin Accad | Mar 1, 2018 | Opinion
Ambassador Massoud Al-Maalouf, former Lebanese ambassador to the United States, denounced the devastating role of U.S. evangelicals in shaping toxic U.S. foreign policies toward the Middle East, particularly toward the Palestinian cause. The Al-Joumhouriah Daily...
by Nathanael Blessington Thadikonda | Mar 1, 2018 | Opinion
How often do we see people at traffic lights and are tempted either to help them or to donate something? Do you remember donating 50 cents to someone recently? What can 50 cents do? A town I visited recently has almost no traffic lights. It is a very small town, yet...
by Ginger Hughes | Feb 28, 2018 | Opinion
By: Ginger Hughes A compass has a small magnetic pin suspended within the casing that allows the needle to spin freely responding to our planet’s magnetism. This needle aligns itself, pointing toward the top of the Earth’s magnetic field, pointing North. Like no...
by David P. Gushee | Feb 28, 2018 | Opinion
Our nation’s immigration system is broken. This is widely agreed, even when little else is. For at least a decade, the outline of a comprehensive fix for our broken immigration system has been relatively clear, but Congress, in its constant state of partisan...
by Cadance Tyler | Feb 28, 2018 | Opinion
El Mozote is hidden in the countryside of El Salvador. In 1981, this small village became the site of a horrific massacre. As a tactical move by the army during the country’s civil war, approximately 1,000 innocent village residents were slaughtered. Thirty-six...