Religious History of Nation that has “seen it all”! We likely expected too much from this tour. My wife and I are both lay pastors, have spent time on the mission field, taught on the subject of CHRISTIAN CHURCH HISTORY and my wife has a BA & MA in ...
Its old town dates back to the 16th century, and you can visit many of Mexico’s important religious and artistic sites. Guanajuato was also home to the Mexican independence movement and the site of the first failed rebellion against colonial rule. Read more Irapuato Read more San Juan de ...
the very things that my Millennial Christian friends share have shaped them into the very passionate people they are today (youth groups, mission trips, Christian retreats and concerts, Christian Universities) were provided by, oh no, yes, the institutional church. And, I repeat, all those thing...
Does that mean I have to start explaining my religious beliefs to everyone who asks? Does it mean our family traditions have to change, or that I have to forgo seeing them on the holidays? What would my wife tell her staunchly Catholic family? What would I tell my fairly atheist family?
Voluntary Consultants Much as the inhabitants of the unMonastery approached the idea of community service via rejecting a core religious premise of monasticism, the strength of this alternative citizen’s cultural initiative lies in being built upon a healthy skepticism towards top-down, hyper conceptu...
Mission Statements must do two things: 1. Tell others who you are and 2. Remind you of what your focus should be both now and in the future WHO and WHAT, but not HOW A mission statement answers two questions: WHO are you? Are you defined geographically, by religious affiliation, by ...
Culturally, the Spiritualist phenomenon of 1848 may be considered the right cure at the right time. Some strains of Spiritualism were the first modern split-off fromallreligious hierarchies, favoring a direct-experience approach to the divine. ...
One dwelling has a particularly chunky lintel and stones arranged with the igloo-esque exactitude usually reserved for the Incas’ religious buildings, suggesting that some VIP lived there. There’s also a great long kallanka (long hall or guesthouse) — another Inca trail links up with this ...
I remember one day I was in a relation with a person who has strong religious beleives and she was often forcing false dichotomies like “If you like to take beer; then you must be evil and an alcoholist”. No matters the context and without any rational, you’re painted either black...