Good morning. Grace and peace to you.
We are following up yesterday’s long list of Kindle deals with another good batch today.
(Yesterday on the blog: Stop Swiping, Start Serving)
There is a lot to ponder in Brad Littlejohn’s theology of immigration. “In my estimation, secure borders, national sovereignty, and limited immigration are affirmed by traditional Christian moral theology. Of course, there is nothing sacred about lines on a map; they are human constructions, which serve human goods. But these goods—the goods of hearth and homeland—are not to be despised, for without them we would lose our humanity.”
Ashley Kim reflects beautifully on those moments that seem to drag on and those moments that seem to fly by.
Christian Catholicity in an Online Age
“The Internet’s generalization of our thinking and language can misshape our instincts in significant ways. I can become more attentive to the problems or controversies that I see online than I am to my own temptations and weaknesses or those of my fellow church members. These dramas may have little to do with the
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