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Msg #24014 Walking Where Abram Walked What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2350 O Little Town of Bethlehem Ephratah What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2347 Perilous Times and the Unthankful What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2347 Perilous Times and the Unthankful What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
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"It Takes Desire" | Bro. Lou DiFilippantonio | April 21, 2024 | Morning Service www.ambassadorbaptistchurch.faithweb.com Evangelist and Missionary, Bro. Lou DiFilippantonio, joined us as the keynote ...
Sunday School Service April 14,  2024 I Peter 5:8 Your adversary and suffering Pastor Niemann Note: A small section is muted on purpose.
December 24, 2023 Sunday Morning Live Stream Note: No Evening Service tonight. Merry CHRISTmas!
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Our apologetics must evolve to engage with the new cultural mood of the next generations.For years now, scholars have announced the death of postmodernism. After decades of dominance as a cultural mood, the famously cynical and relativistic intellectual stance is finally out. In its place, another ideological outlook is taking hold—as those of us who spend significant time with the next generations (Z and Alpha) may have noticed.So, the question is this: What fresh dispositions of thought are taking hold—and how might Christians engage well with our evolving cultural frontier?One term that scholars have used to identify the new cultural mood is metamodernism. First used in 1975 to describe a literary shift, the concept became more prominent in the early 2000s thanks to the work of cultural analysts Timotheus Vermeulen and Robin van den Akker. In their 2010 article, “Notes on Metamodernism,” they made a convincing case for the new zeitgeist and provided a cultural analysis of its characteristics.Metamodernism, according to Vermeulen and Van Den Akker, is a “structure of feeling” marked by “(often guarded) hopefulness and (at times feigned) sincerity”—deriving from a realization that “history is moving rapidly beyond its much proclaimed end.” While there are plenty of academic responses to their work, the term has gained little traction in the public sphere.As a high school teacher, youth pastor, and an older member of Gen Z myself, I’ve not only grown up breathing the ideological air of metamodernism but have also seen what it looks like on the ground. It can manifest in a few tangible ways, including in what I call apocalyptic hope, inverted worldview-building, and highly narrated identities.Apocalyptic hope (or what Vermeulen and Van Den ...Continue reading...
The widespread outrage over Kristi Noem's book should awaken moral responsibility—not just toward pets but for one another.This piece was adapted from Russell Moore’s newsletter. Subscribe here.Decades ago, before he was a nationally recognized face, Stephen Colbert featured a “Better Know a District” segment on his show The Colbert Report in which he would parody a far-right cable news host as he interviewed members of Congress, trying to get them in awkward situations for comedic effect.In his interview with John Yarmuth, then a congressman from Louisville, Kentucky, Colbert referenced Yarmuth’s past life as a debater on local television. He challenged Yarmuth to show his debating chops by instantly debating the opposite side of a question of Colbert’s choosing. The stance Colbert chose to take was that throwing kittens into a wood chipper was a bad thing to do—and he then pointed to Yarmuth to argue the other side—that sometimes, throwing kittens in a wood chipper is the right thing to do.The joke, of course, was that no decent human being, much less a politician seeking votes from a majority of the population, would ever want to be seen making the case for throwing kittens in a wood chipper. This past week, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem proved that, as much as the American public has shifted on all kinds of issues, there still isn’t much of a constituency in this country for “Throw Kittens in the Wood Chipper”—or, more accurately in this case, “Shoot Puppies in the Head.”In fact, many people have noted that this might be the most united that Americans of both parties and all tribes have been of late—all in expressing revulsion at Noem’s self-disclosure in her memoir that she “hated” her 14-month-old dog Cricket. When Cricket wasn’t ...Continue reading...
By The Corbett Report Today James goes over 5 tech tips that will help improve your browsing and online research experience. NOTE: As always, your...How to Scale a Paywall (and other useful tips) – “Solutions Watch” with James Corbett
By The Corbett Report Today James goes over 5 tech tips that will help improve your browsing and online research experience. NOTE: As always, your...How to Scale a Paywall (and other useful tips) – “Solutions Watch” with James Corbett
Cecil Williams, the pastor of an influential San Francisco-based church who was known for his decades-long support for the LGBT movement, has died. He was 94.? ?
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