I’ve noticed an interesting phenomenon. Those who embrace the Universalist View of Salvation tend to be more loving and accepting of those who are unlike […]
Source: How Universalism Allows Us To Freely Love As Christ Intended | Keith Giles
I’ve noticed an interesting phenomenon. Those who embrace the Universalist View of Salvation tend to be more loving and accepting of those who are unlike […]
Source: How Universalism Allows Us To Freely Love As Christ Intended | Keith Giles
A party of soldiers who suffered a cruel death for their faith, near Sebaste, in Lesser Armenia, victims of the persecutions of Licinius, who, after the year 316, persecuted the Christians of the East. The earliest account of their martyrdom is given by St. Basil, Bishop of Caesarea (370-379), in a homily delivered on the feast of the Forty Martyrs (Hom. xix in P.G., XXXI, 507 sqq.). The feast is consequently more ancient than the episcopate of Basil, whose eulogy on them was pronounced only fifty or sixty years after martyrdom, which is thus historic beyond a doubt. According to St. Basil, forty soldiers who had openly confessed themselves Christians were condemned by the prefect to be exposed naked upon a frozen pond near Sebaste on a bitterly cold night, that they might freeze to death. Among the confessors, one yielded and, leaving his companions, sought the warm baths near…
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He broke the law in order to preach the gospel. Is he a martyr or not?
Source: John Chau’s Death on North Sentinel Island Roils the Missionary World | The New Yorker
“For all things are yours, whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or the present or the future—all are yours, and you are […]
Source: The Gospel of Us | Keith Giles
So, really, there’s nothing especially new and out of the ordinary about depicting the Holy Family in a condition of instability and danger.
Source: Baby Jesus In a Cage? Yes, It’s Political | Rebecca Bratten Weiss

from a speech President Eisenhower delivered at the Fourth Annual Republican Women’s National Conference on 6 March 1956…
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Tablets from some of the world’s oldest civilizations hold rich details about life thousands of years ago, but few people today can read them. New technology is helping to unlock them.
Source: BBC – Future – The key to cracking long-dead languages?
Studies re-date ‘Y-chromosome Adam’ and ‘mitochondrial Eve’.
Source: Genetic Adam and Eve did not live too far apart in time : Nature News & Comment