'
Home »

Search Result

Search Results for talk

Links

There's nothing small about the love of God
Bridging the gap between Sunday school and seminary
Show all results in links

Articles

Msg #24010 Purifying Faith What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
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 #2345 Post Perilous Times 1 - 4 What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Msg #2340 Come Up Hither What The Bible Says - Good Samaritan's Penny Pulpit by Pastor Ed Rice
Show all results in articles 

Videos

Family Talk Wisdom to Follow. (4-10-24 WED) Victory Baptist Church Darlington, SC Wednesday Evening Service 4-10-24 Proverbs 1:8-19.
Episode 41 - Conversation with Sean Teis and Pastor Jayson Keefer from Astatula Baptist Church - ... In Episode 41 of the Let's Talk About Fatherlessness Show, Sean Teis has a conversation with Pastor Jayson Keefer from Astatula ...
Pastor Ethan Custer - Let's Talk About Jesus (Mar 31, 2024 - Sun PM) Watch our Live Stream Sundays starting at 9:45am, Sunday Evenings at 6pm and Wednesday Evenings at 7pm (CST) Take a ...
Family Talk: The Fear of the Lord. (SUN P.M. 3-10-24) Victory Baptist Church Darlington, SC Sunday P.M. Service 3-10-24 Proverbs 1:1-7.
Pastor Paul Chappell: A Church Trusting in Him Pastor Chappell joins us from America and concludes our weekend Conference as we celebrate our 47th Aniversary by talking ...
Show all results in videos 

News

In the uncanny valley of the shadow of data, we should fear no evil—and prepare for a very different future.This piece was adapted from Russell Moore’s newsletter. Subscribe here.In the past several weeks, two events occurred that are going to change our futures. One of them was the launching of OpenAI’s new artificial intelligence program, GPT-4o, just ahead of several competitors who will do the same in a matter of weeks. The other was the defrocking of a robot priest for teaching that baptisms could be done with Gatorade. I’m afraid the church is not ready for either.The more talked-about happening was the OpenAI announcement, complete with videos of the AI program laughing, seeming to blush, telling jokes, seeing and describing things in real time, and even singing songs made up on the spot (to whatever degree of emotion and enthusiasm was demanded).Far less culturally noticed was the fact that just a few weeks before, the Roman Catholic apologetics platform Catholic Answers reined in an AI chatbot called “Father Justin,” which was designed to help people through questions of doctrine and practice.People started to get upset when Father Justin started claiming to be an actual priest, capable of hearing confession and offering sacraments, and when it started giving unorthodox answers to questions, such as whether baptizing a baby with Gatorade would be all right in an emergency (the magisterium says no).Now Father Justin is just “Justin,” a “lay theologian.” Catholic Answers acknowledged to critics that they are pioneering a new technological landscape and learning—as the whole world will—just how difficult it is to keep an artificial intelligence orthodox. If my Catholic friends thought Martin Luther was bad, wait until the robots start posting theses to the ...Continue reading...
Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com Have a Florida condo? Can you afford a $100,000 or higher special assessment for new safety standards? After the...Florida Condo Owners Dump Units Over Six-Figure Special Assessments
Spiritual care is essential as stressors among law enforcement rise.Sitting in the front row of a supervisor training in 2016, Stamford Police Sgt. Sean Boeger raised his hand every time the instructor asked who had dealt with a particular experience, including homicides, fatal accidents, and child deaths.During his nearly 30 years as a police officer, 48-year-old Boeger had helped with body recovery efforts at Ground Zero after 9/11. When 20 children were killed by a lone shooter in 2012 at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, just 40 miles from Stamford, Boeger volunteered to help the small Newtown police department. He covered midnight shifts as officers took time to recover.The instructor at the training triggered something in Boeger. Until that class, he had never dwelt much on the effect of witnessing so much trauma. Driving home that evening, he also thought back to another incident, when he responded to a report of a small child falling out of an eighth-story window.“I felt overwhelmed, kind of panic-stricken,” he recalled of that evening. “I think I was more in shock from the stuff I’d never contemplated and the trauma impact it had on me. Because you don’t stop to think about it.”So Boeger did something he had never contemplated previously: He sought help from John Revell, a chaplain who had recently been spending time with his department.“I don’t know what’s going on with me, but I feel like I need to talk to you,” Boeger recalls telling Revell, whom he calls “the Rev.” Revell invited him over, interrupting his family dinnertime, and the two spent an hour or so talking. It opened the door to a longer-term relationship, and an eventual appreciation for the Rev’s consistent presence around ...Continue reading...
ABC's The View was pulsing with anti-Catholic bigotry during Thursday's show, as pretend-moderate co-host Sara Haines lashed out and smeared Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker and his Catholic faith as “extremists” and “cult-like.” His crime? Giving a commencement address at Catholic, Benedictine College where he talked about – among other things – how some women find […]The post The View Host Sara Haines: Harrison Butker’s Pro-Life Christian Views are Like a “Cult” appeared first on LifeNews.com.
For all his greatness, we should most seek to imitate the late pastor's humility and indifference to fame.In spring of last year, many of us saw a photo of the late Timothy Keller sitting on a park bench. The photo was used on the cover of Collin Hansen’s biography of Keller, and it circulated around the internet in May when he passed away—on social media, blogs, and even Keller’s personal website.What most of us didn’t see, however, was the banana peel lying on the bench only a couple feet from Keller. The peel has been cropped from most versions of the photo, and understandably so. Who wants to see an ugly brown bit of organic waste in an author’s photograph?I confess that if I were a world-famous pastor and best-selling author having my picture taken by a professional photographer, I would most certainly have moved the banana peel before someone took my picture. Who wouldn’t? But Keller didn’t seem to care.I believe this points to a deeper character trait of Keller’s, which many observed during his lifetime of ministry: an indifference to fame and to curating an image—something many of us struggle with in the social media era. This is also part of why, I believe, he finished his race so well.Finishing well in life and ministry has been historically difficult for believers, especially for those in positions of leadership. Think of Gideon or Solomon in the Old Testament, Demas in the New Testament, or, of course, the many church leaders today who have infamously failed to persevere.The esteem that leaders receive from the Christian community can allow for hidden flaws to grow like rust on the hull of a ship, unnoticed and unaddressed at first. But as these leaders reach greater influence, greater weight is placed on these flaws—which can reach ...Continue reading...
Show all results in news 

FamilyNet Top Sites Top Independent Baptist Sites KJV-1611 Authorized Version Topsites Preaching Tools. Net Top 100 Websites Top Local New Testament Baptist Church Sites Cyberspace Ministry - Top Christian Sites The Fundamental Top 500

Powered by Ekklesia-Online

Locations of visitors to this page free counters