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Do microbes get married and become one? Is this an example of evolution?
Ethan Hawke has made a movie as scandalous as one of the writer's short stories.Why not write something that “a lot, a lot, of people like?” Regina O’Connor asks her daughter, the writer Flannery O’Connor, in the middle of the new biopic Wildcat. The same question might be put to the film itself. It’s not a movie that a lot of people will like. But unlike the author’s mother, I mean that as a high compliment. Director and screenwriter Ethan Hawke has made a film worthy of Flannery O’Connor’s genius.An epigraph from O’Connor’s essay “The Nature and Aim of Fiction” sums up what Wildcat sets out to do: “I’m always irritated by people who imply writing fiction is an escape from reality. It is a plunge into reality.” Fittingly, rather than depict the writer’s life from birth to death, Wildcat uses her fiction to discover what’s real, to “get down under things” to the problem of suffering, the limitations of human experience, the desire for goodness, the habits of evil, and, always present, the longing for God.The result is a movie as scandalous as one of O’Connor’s short stories—“shocking to the system,” to borrow her words. Her devotees will applaud it; most of the audience will be left wondering what just clobbered them.After that opening epigraph, Wildcat rolls a fake trailer for a 1950s-style horror flick inspired by O’Connor’s story “The Comforts of Home.” (A mother brings home a wayward, orphaned teen who tries to seduce her grown son. The son attempts to kill the teen, but shoots his own mother instead.) The trailer, starring Laura Linney and Maya Hawke—who also play the roles of Regina and Flannery— sets up expectations ...Continue reading...
This article was originally published by Ethan Huff at Natural News.? Buried beneath headlines about congressional treason and wars and rumors of war is a...Insect Biodiversity Plummeting As Global Food Supply Teeters Toward Collapse
A late historian explores how crusade hymns told both the classic story of gospel salvation and the evolving story of evangelical worship music.Crowds of over 50,000. Famous special guests. Hundreds of cities in the US and around the world. Beloved, catchy songs. For many, these might sound like readouts from the Taylor Swift Eras Tour hype machine. But exchange the glittery girl power for the gospel in baritone, and you have one of the most successful musical touring acts in the postwar world: the Billy Graham Crusades.The first association that “Billy Graham Crusade” may evoke is not musical at all, but rather a close-up shot of the evangelist, with his penetrating, wide-eyed gaze and raised forearms, thundering, “The Bible says …” Admittedly, music was not the main focus.Yet as the late historian Edith Blumhofer shows in her final book, Songs I Love to Sing: The Billy Graham Crusades and the Shaping of Modern Worship, neither Graham’s ministry nor the late-century rise of contemporary Christian music can be understood without it. As crusade song leader Cliff Barrows pursued his main goal—“sing to save”—he and his teammates bridged stylistic, cultural, and generational divides, transforming evangelicals’ music into the harmonic blend of old and new that is familiar today.Mining rich resourcesBefore unpacking this highly original book, a few words about the author. Blumhofer is an American religious historian renowned for her empathetic biographies of hymnist Fanny J. Crosby and evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson, as well as broader studies of evangelicalism and Pentecostalism. She concluded her career with this new study, sadly succumbing to a battle with cancer in the process.To finish the project, she tapped Jesus People expert Larry Eskridge, with whom she had for many years directed the Institute ...Continue reading...
By Joel R. McConvey Large financial institutions are coming to terms with the new world of tech-driven fraud and adopting digital identity tools as an...Mastercard announces new AI suite with behavioral biometrics to fight fraud
By Bianca Gonzalez More companies with household names familiar to consumers are getting hit with lawsuits for alleged violations of BIPA and New York's Biometric...T-Mobile, Amazon, and Target hit with facial recognition lawsuits
By Bianca Gonzalez More companies with household names familiar to consumers are getting hit with lawsuits for alleged violations of BIPA and New York's Biometric...T-Mobile, Amazon, and Target hit with facial recognition lawsuits
By Dr. Meryl Nass Bill Clinton Begins the Phony Era of Pandemics and Bioterrorism In November 1997 US Secretary of Defense? William Cohen held up a...How the ‘Bioterrorism' Era Began
By Dr. Meryl Nass Bill Clinton Begins the Phony Era of Pandemics and Bioterrorism In November 1997 US Secretary of Defense? William Cohen held up a...How the ‘Bioterrorism' Era Began
By Bianca Gonzalez More companies with household names familiar to consumers are getting hit with lawsuits for alleged violations of BIPA and New York's Biometric...T-Mobile, Amazon, and Target hit with facial recognition lawsuits
A recent news article detailed an experiment by developmental biologist Moisés Mallo and his colleagues who were studying Tgfbr1.
The NAIA issued a ruling that will only allow athletes to participate in NAIA-sponsored women's sports if their biological sex assigned at birth is female.
The NAIA issued a ruling that will only allow athletes to participate in NAIA-sponsored women's sports if their biological sex assigned at birth is female.
Legendary actor Dennis Quaid calls his new gospel album an “autobiographical” record, saying it tells the story of a man searching for purpose until he filled his “God-sized hole” through his Christian faith.
The NAIA issued a ruling that will only allow athletes to participate in NAIA-sponsored women's sports if their biological sex assigned at birth is female.
A recent news article detailed an experiment by developmental biologist Moisés Mallo and his colleagues who were studying Tgfbr1.
A recent news article detailed an experiment by developmental biologist Moisés Mallo and his colleagues who were studying Tgfbr1.
Legendary actor Dennis Quaid calls his new gospel album an “autobiographical” record, saying it tells the story of a man searching for purpose until he filled his “God-sized hole” through his Christian faith.
Is there a biological standard for male and female? Well, it's pretty obvious the answer is yes.
A recent news item caught my eye, as it stated that “a biological mechanism can explain [gar's] status as ‘living fossils.'”
More lost stories from the end of March 2002 are republished here. Topics: the tuatara, eyes, self-organization, cells, architecture.
More lost stories from the end of March 2002 are republished here. Topics: the tuatara, eyes, self-organization, cells, architecture.
A recent news item caught my eye, as it stated that “a biological mechanism can explain [gar's] status as ‘living fossils.'”
Preston Sprinkle's Exiles is a bracing call to return to Scripture, but some of his specific political applications are dubious.
House Bill 4876 authorizes the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) to intervene and potentially remove children from their biological parents under the new definition of an “abused child."

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