Learning From Young Atheists: What Turned Them Off Christianity
Have you ever asked a young atheist why he or she doesn't believe? Well, one researcher did. And the answers may surprise you.
Have you ever asked a young atheist why he or she doesn't believe? Well, one researcher did. And the answers may surprise you.
You've heard it over and over: Gay "marriage" is inevitable. Well, at least that's what its supporters want you to believe.
The secular powers that be are putting pressure on pastors to limit their practice of the Christian faith to just the four walls of the local church.
Cultural views on homosexuality are changing so rapidly, it's hard to keep track of what is or isn't homophobic anymore.
The Supreme Court is deciding whether or not to redefine marriage – and we're hearing a lot of claims about how well children do when they're reared by homosexual couples. Sad to say, some of those claims are being made to the Supremes – and they are completely false.
Ten years ago, the preamble to the newly-drafted constitution of the European Union omitted any reference to Christianity. It was an unmistakable reminder of Christianity's diminished influence in a part of the world it helped create.
Author Joel Stein, who's forty-three, begins with some sobering data. For instance, according to the National Institutes of Health, the incidence of narcissistic personality disorder is three times as high among twenty-somethings than among those over sixty-five.
It's a potent reminder that while we may not be certain who the winners in the upheavals rocking Syria and the rest of the Middle East might be, we already know who the losers will be: Christians.
It takes a truly great man to resist seizing power when it is clearly within his grasp.
Some pro-abortion folks today are a little upset at a series of undercover videos released by Lila Rose. While not as grisly as the stories coming out of Gosnell's house of butchery, these videos nonetheless show the chilling and callous attitude of late-term abortion providers.