How do we communicate with people whose moral outlook is so radically different than our own? I’ve got some thoughts, next on BreakPoint.
John Stonestreet interviews Mike Adams and Jeff Myers of Summit Ministries about preparing your student's worldview for the crucible of college.
Young readers will get a shiver out of the Tales from Lovecraft Middle School series. Read More.
No matter how much wealth we accumulate, we can never go back to Eden. Gina Dalfonzo reviews the new movie, "The Great Gatsby." Read More
T. M. says that the Centurions Program is an essential Christian study program for all believers, and particularly for young adults. Read More.
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BreakPoint Radio - Wednesday
Lena Dunham and Jane Austen |
How do we communicate with people whose moral outlook is so radically different than our own? I’ve got some thoughts, next on BreakPoint.
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BreakPoint This Week
 | John Stonestreet interviews Mike Adams and Jeff Myers of Summit Ministries about preparing your student's worldview for the crucible of college.
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The Point Radio
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If we aren’t clear about this, they won’t be either. For the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, I’m John Stonestreet with The Point.
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 How the Church Has Failed 55 Million Orphans
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By: John Stonestreet|Published: May 10, 2013 2:49 PM
Christians might be delusional when it comes to the issue of marriage and the culture. John Stonestreet tells us how we should rethink the whole issue.
READ FULL ARTICLE »Exposing Evil and Loving OthersBy: John Stonestreet|Published: April 15, 2013 4:17 PM  The media blackout shade surrounding the Gosnell case is being ripped down, and we’re seeing real evil. Can a Christian expose a person like Gosnell as an act of love? John Stonestreet tackles this question.
READ FULL ARTICLE »Secular Delusion & Christian DualismBy: John Stonestreet|Published: April 3, 2013 2:29 PM
In the West, there are very few true atheist or agnostics. However, there are way too many practical atheists, and you just might be one if... John Stonestreet explains.
READ FULL ARTICLE »
By Charles GilmanBy: Kim Moreland|Published: May 17, 2013 6:30 PM Upcoming seventh grader Robert Arthur, protagonist of the Tales from Lovecraft Middle School series, is nervous and lonely. As far as he knows, he’s the only student from his old elementary school sent to the new, state-of-the-art middle school. Without friends to share the experience with, Arthur isn’t excited about the fact that Lovecraft had a huge pool and other state of the arts amenities.
His luck goes from bad to worse when, on the first day of school, he realizes that he isn’t the only student from his old school after all. He spies his nemesis, Glenn Torkells, a few bleachers up from where he’s sitting.
READ FULL ARTICLE »By Elizabeth EnrightBy: Christy McDougall|Published: May 3, 2013 4:38 PM
On the day when Mr. Melendy is having a tremendously important meeting, he is interrupted by his youngest son, Oliver, bringing a dripping fish into the room to detail precisely how he caught it; by his oldest daughter, Mona, wandering through the room practicing Ophelia’s mad scene from “Hamlet”; by his youngest daughter, Randy, coming in to give a detailed explanation of her difficulties with knitting (like Ulysses’ wife continually ripping out her stitches, only without the suitors); by the two family dogs chasing each other around the room; and by the sounds of his oldest son, Rush, trying to learn how to walk on stilts.
READ FULL ARTICLE »By R. J. PalacioBy: Kim Moreland|Published: April 23, 2013 5:27 PM
He sees the looks of horror people give him when he walks past them on the street. He desperately wants to be an “ordinary” looking kid, but he’s not.
Ten-year-old August “Auggie” Pullman, protagonist of “Wonder” by R. J. Palacio, suffers from a recessive mutant gene that left him with mandibulofacial dysostosis. In short, Auggie was born with serious cranial-facial deformities (think of the character of Sloth in “The Goonies,” played by John Matuszak).
READ FULL ARTICLE »
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