It may sound strange to hear this from an academic historian - but Ii think sources are much overvalued in most areas of thought - especially in understanding the news.
When Staff Sgt. Major Bales killed 27 people, all the news reports carried the story that he had acted alone, left his camp in the middle of the night with his rifle and a few gallons of gasoline, walked a coujple of mlies to a village, killed 17 people, set fire to the bodies, walked back to the base, and surrendered and convessed.
We’re sorry the news was pre-empted tonight due to the Survivor Finale. We’ll have updates on the situation in Slave Lake on our website and the latest developments on the morning news at 5:30 AM Monday.
Pathetic!
Aren't top news stories supposed to interrupt tv shows, not the other way around?
Another earthquake has hit Christchurch in New Zealand...
2.08pm: Police say "multiple fatalities" have been reported at several locations in the central city. This includes two buses crushed by falling buildings. A doctor and emergency services are attending.
2.04pm: Key advises people to leave the central city. Evacuees will be looked after, he says.
a friend of mine posted this story on facebook and i thought i would share it just to change up the boards and add a new discussion. this story is not a big surprise, and i know there are alot of people who frequent this forum that will be saying "and this is news because?!?", but i feel it further adds to your point(s). the media is well known for fabricating the truth but when it's this blatent, why aren't more people worried? should the media be held responsible for their actions and misinformation? it's times like this that further my support for freedo
THis is just a notice. There is a web site for an Israeli newspaper called Haaretz. It can been very funny, as well as being a devastating critic of the current Israeli government. i's called
I registered in my Nursing program today and will start January 18th. Which means that I am only free for two more weeks. :( Before I have to study and do assignments.
I was watching the news on TV tonight - CBC, I think - when I heard a statement that was so ordinary, it almost blew by me. It was propaganda delivered as news. And I'm sure it was not deliberate. I'm sure it was just an example of how our perceptions get in the way of understanding what it really going on.
With GC40 about to start, and everyone waiting with baited breath for the decisions the commissioners will make, it’s probably worthwhile to understand how the GC News will work. I’m basing my comments on my work at previous GC’s.
"A Few Thoughts on Numbers, Decline, and What We Might Do"
From the blog of the moderator of the Presbyterian church (USA), Bruce Reyes-Chow, comes a meditation on declining membership numbers in this major American mainline denomination. According to the moderator, the denomination's membership numbers have declined by another seventy thousand this year, and people have reasons that they send Reyes-Chow's way. "The church is too liberal!", "The church is too conservative!", and more.
Reyes-Chow responds with thoughts on the complexity of the situation, the ambivalence of numbers, and the failure of the church's institutional worldview (bringing with it a failure to adapt). To start the process of breaking this worldview and making the church more flexible, Reyes-Chow proposes some questions, like:
- "What ARE our essentials and non-negotiables as we gather as a denominational gathering of the Body of Christ?"
- "Can we handle an abundance of manifestations of the Presbyterian family where congregations look, feel, and operate in drastically different ways?"
- And "Can we truly embrace the unknown, but yet joyfully strive to seek God's intentions?"
To check out the rest of Reyes-Chow's interesting and provocative blog entry, go here.
"One of the Most Powerfully Influential Religious Leaders in Today's World (and You Probably Don't Know His Name!)"
The above title for this entry on the "Road to Priesthood" blog is followed by the question "When you think of religious leaders who've helped bring social change to the 20th century, what name comes to mind?" The author suggests you probably thought of Gandhi, or Martin Luther King Jr. Close? How about Walter Rauschenbusch?
"Who the heck is Walter Rauschenbusch," you ask? Well, only the pioneer of the Social Gospel Movement in the early 20th century, and a potential uniting figure for mainline Protestants and evangelicals. Not to mention the fact that Rauschenbusch's book Christianity and the Social Crisis helped inspire Gandhi, King, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Desmond Tutu.
Rauschenbusch's great-grandson, the Rev. Paul Rauschenbusch, spoke on the occasion of the book's 100th anniversary about the book, and his great-grandfather, for the New America Foundation. Check out the full video of the speech in which the younger Rauschenbusch talks about how the book continues to "challenge and inspire today's social justice thinkers" as well as how different Christian denominations can "find common ground in the understanding of our faith, melding the Evangelical church's traditional focus on the gospel with mainline church's focus on social justice."
Would you expect to find an atheist in your church? How would you treat them once you knew they were there? Caryn Solly, writing on the blog of RevolutionNYC church in (you guessed it) New York City, shares her experiences as an atheist among the Christians.
For Solly, the primary attraction for attending RevolutionNYC is the ability to challenge her own beliefs and maintain an open mind. Although she has made friends and has connected to the community there, and respects the teachings of Jesus, Solly wants to see the other side of the conversation, and to be part of elevating the tone of that conversation between Christians and atheists.
To find out more about what attracted an atheist to church, and just where she sees that Christian/atheist conversation going, check out the full article here.