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Searched on keyword: Atheism
Displaying 1 - 20 of 87 articles.
The Trials of Being Agnostic A conversation with skeptic Wendy Kaminer. interview by Michael Cromartie
The Man Who Was Thursday Revisiting Chesterton's masterpiece. Martin Gardner
Poetry
Funds Missing Along with O'Hair Funds Missing Along with O'Hair by Jim Jones in Austin
First Protestant Church Dedicated First Protestant Church Dedicated by Mike Beeson in Tirana
Yancey: The Last Deist We need more than a just watchmaker who winds up the universe and lets it tick.
Atheism: O'Hair's Stepchildren Regroup By Art Moore.
Two Held in O'Hair Case By Art Moore.
Neopaganism's Bewitching Charms, Part 1 of 3 The movement rejects Christianity, but we may discover surprising openings for the gospel. by Loren Wilkinson
Neopaganism's Bewitching Charms, Part 2 of 3 The movement rejects Christianity, but we may discover surprising openings for the gospel. by Loren Wilkinson
Neopaganism's Bewitching Charms, Part 3 of 3 The movement rejects Christianity, but we may discover surprising openings for the gospel. by Loren Wilkinson
Albania's Journey from Atheism to Model of Religious Growth Orthodox Archbishop credited with growing and strengthening the church Edmund Doogue Ecumenical News International
C.S. Lewis: A Profile of His Life LYLE DORSETT Lyle W. Dorsett is curator of the Marion E. Wade Collection, which houses C.S. Lewis's original manuscripts, letters, and papers at Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. He is the author of And God Came In: The Extraordinary Story of Joy Davidman, Her Life and Marriage to C.S. Lewis, and co-editor of C.S. Lewis. Letters to Children
The Great Divide When I fail as a critic I may yet be useful as a specimen.
What the Soviet Constitution Says About Freedom and Religion
Russian Christianity and the Revolution: What Happened? Russia and the surrounding Slavic countries were at one time considered among the "most Christian" of nations. So where was the church during the revolution that made the USSR atheistic? Andrew Sorokowski, having both a degree in law and a master's degree in Soviet studies from Harvard, is now completing a doctoral dissertation in history at the University of London School of Slavonic and East European Studies. From 1984–87 he was in Kent, England, working with Keston College, a research institute that specializes in reporting on religious life in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
Christianity and the American Revolution: A Gallery of Christians in the Cause Five devout champions of liberty and revolution. Mark Couvillon is historical interpreter and researcher at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. He is co-author of "Patrick Henry Essays" (1994).
We Do Not Wish to Blur the Faith The spiritual head of Orthodoxy speaks some frank words to Protestants. interview with Bartholomew I, archbishop of Constantinople
The Press Weighs In Condensed editorials from the summer of 1925 show a nation at odds.
Apologetics: C.S. Lewis The atheist scholar who became an Anglican, an apologist, and a patron saint of Christians everywhere. Ted Olsen
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