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Calvary Baptist Church, Chatsworth Illinois Here at Calvary we love God and His Word, each other, and our community. We'll keep you up on what's going on and offer encouragement for your daily walk.
Centropolis Baptist Church, Centropolis Kansas A friendly, loving Independent Baptist Church that sings the old hymns of faith & uses the KJV Bible to teach how God would have us live our daily life.
Cobblestone Road Ministries. KJV Bible Studies, Christian Quotes, Christian poems, Apologetics, Bible Prophecy, Bible Cure, Rapture, Famous Quotes, Salvation, Messianic Prophecies
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Articles

Msg #2404 Let's Say We Abide What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2402 Starting Life Right What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2327 Grace According to Measure What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2324 Refining Trials What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
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Videos

Monday Noon Prayer Meeting Please join us for our daily prayer meeting.
Tuesday Noon Prayer Meeting Please join us for our daily prayer meeting!
Tuesday Noon Prayer Meeting Please join us for our daily prayer meeting!
Monday Noon Prayer Meeting Please join us for our daily prayer meeting.
Friday Noon Prayer Meeting Please join us for our daily prayer meeting!
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News

Christians can disciple each other toward action, prayer, and hope.I’m 26 and mostly full of enthusiasm for the future. But when I think about the heat waves, floods, and humanitarian crises that I’ll likely experience in my lifetime, I feel a sense of dread. And even more so when I think about the future of my children and my children’s children. I wonder if they’ll get to experience all the beauty of God’s creation that I so cherished while growing up.As a young farmer, I feel my chest tighten as I watch weather patterns and the seasons become more and more erratic. I worry if there’ll be wars for food and water with a warmer climate, or if water sources will be polluted and the soil will be eroded.Many people, especially my age, feel the same way. A recent survey asked 10,000 young people across the world about their thoughts and feelings regarding climate change. According to the findings, three out of four young people think the future is frightening. More than half reported feelings of sadness, anxiety, anger, and powerlessness when thinking about climate change. And around 45 percent of respondents said their feelings about climate change negatively affected their daily life and functioning.These fears have become so prevalent in our generation that a new term has been coined: eco-anxiety.In a way, young people today have fulfilled climate activist Greta Thunberg’s provocation to leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in 2019: “I don't want you to be hopeful, I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day.”But while I respect Thunberg’s contribution to putting climate change on the world’s agenda, I disagree with her on this. I don’t believe that panic will help us. ...Continue reading...
This article was originally published by Patricia Harrity at The Daily Exposé. Did you know there is an official agenda, one which is heavily promoted...THE END OF HUMANITY – As Planned By The Global Leaders
Elon Musk and his social media platform X have announced their intention to contest an Australian government order demanding the removal of a video showing the stabbing of an Assyrian priest. The platform faces a daily fine of $500,000.
We must always be people of the Word, but we'll have to reimagine deep engagement with Scripture.Christians are readers. We are “people of the book.” We own personal Bibles, translated into our mother tongues, and read them daily. Picture “quiet time” and you’ll see a table, a cup of coffee, and a Bible spread open to dog-eared, highlighted, annotated pages. For Christians, daily Bible reading is the minimum standard for the life of faith. What kind of Christian, some of us may think, doesn’t meet this low bar?This vision of our faith resonates for many. It certainly describes the way I was raised. As a snapshot of a slice of the church at a certain time in history—20th-century American evangelicals—it checks out. But as a timeless vision of what it means to follow Christ, it falls short, and it does so in a way that will seriously impinge on our ability to make disciples in an increasingly postliterate culture, a culture in which most people still understand the bare mechanics of reading but overwhelmingly consume audio and visual media instead.We can see how this literacy-focused idea of Christianity will fail in the future by looking to the past. For most of Christian history, most believers were illiterate. Reading the Bible daily wasn’t an option because reading wasn’t an option.This doesn’t mean Scripture was irrelevant to ordinary Christians’ lives. But the sacred page wasn’t primarily a private matter for personal devotion; it was a public matter heard in the gathering of God’s people for worship. The Bible was the church’s book—a liturgical book, a book whose natural habitat was the voice of Christ’s body lifted in praise. To hear the Word of God, you joined the people of God. Lectors ...Continue reading...
yk13883437Various cardboard game pieces found during conservation efforts, offering insights into the daily lives of Jewish inmates using them for recreation under harsh conditions
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