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Previous Posts
Animal Wisdom: The Voice of the Serpent
Our family watched Jaws together the other evening -- which, in case you're wondering, I regard as responsible parenting since our kids are basically too young to be genuinely scared by the film. The whole rest of the next day, two-year-old Saul was chattering about the "shark teeth." "Shark teeth g
posted 3:56:33pm Mar. 16, 2010 |
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Reading Wesley Smith: Why the Darwin Debate Matters
If the intelligent-design side in the evolution debate doesn't receive the support you might expect from people who should be allies, that may be because they haven't grasped why the whole thing matters so urgently. I got an email recently from a journalist whom I'd queried on the subject. "All told
posted 5:07:12pm Mar. 15, 2010 |
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The Mission of the Jews
Don't miss my essay over at First Things on the mission of the Jews to the world. This, I think, the key idea that the Jewish community needs to absorb at this very unusual cultural moment, for the time is so, so right. Non-Jews are waiting for us to fulfill the roll God gave us in the Torah. Please
posted 6:14:16pm Mar. 05, 2010 |
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Darwin at the Mountains of Madness: Evolution & the Occult
Of all the regrettable cultural forces that Darwinism helped unleash, perhaps the most surprising and seemingly unlikely is its role in sparking the creation of modern occultism. Charles Darwin himself could not have been less interested in the topic. But no attempt to assess the scope of his legacy
posted 2:04:11pm Mar. 04, 2010 |
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Why Women Will Never Be Orthodox Rabbis
I have sympathy for religious mavericks like Rabbi Avi Weiss of New York, who for ordaining a woman as a rabbi, or "rabba" as he calls her, is under fire from Orthodox rabbinic colleagues on the Rabbinical Council of America. To be Avi Weiss takes guts. Unfortunately for him, as the N
posted 6:10:06pm Feb. 28, 2010 |
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posted April 20, 2009 at 11:25 pm
This may offend both camps (a Good Thing) — The two are quite compatible (or in government speak, “they are not incompatible”). One is poetry, the other is factual; both are true.
posted April 21, 2009 at 12:52 am
In the long run the smart money is on the physicists.
posted April 21, 2009 at 2:44 pm
It’s very sad that people like Stephen Hawking will fight to the end and never believe in God, which, when one does believe, the questions of the origin of the universe are finally left alone and will be sorted out when we meet God. Mr. Hawking will also meet the God he doesn’t believe in—all his intelligence and intellectual probing will never take the place of pure faith in our Creator.