Speaking Out on Domestic Violence
April 14, 2018[…] can expect to be involved in marital violence at some time during marriage. One in twenty-two, or 3.8 percent, of wives are the victims of violence likely to produce injury each year. Six of […]
[…] can expect to be involved in marital violence at some time during marriage. One in twenty-two, or 3.8 percent, of wives are the victims of violence likely to produce injury each year. Six of […]
[…] they support as prophet has seen none of them. Sonia Johnson was excommunicated from the Church on 6 December 1979. The night of her Church court, several Forum members attended a vigil held in […]
[…] and culture just as Perry Miller and Henry Nash Smith aided understanding a generation ago. After working for twelve years on Illusions of Innocence: Protestant Primitivism in America, 1630-1875, Richard T. Hughes and C. […]
[…] family,” I would complain. “Arrange for someone to stay with you when you are sick,” she would counter. Her solutions were obvious. My family and I had been too upset to find them. We […]
[…] William Jarman (1884), and other sensationalist authors whose works were available to Conan Doyle in Great Britain.[ 6] In addition, he drew heavily from the plot of an 1885 Robert Louis Stevenson short story […]
Dialogue 23.4 (Winter 1990): 83–96 This essay explores some of the strengths of deliberately choosing to relate to our world with gender-inclusive language in three areas
[…] felt like a prophet was in 1969, in the midst of the threatened and sometimes actual violence over the Church’s denial of priesthood to blacks. In that bleak time, during which I attended the […]
[…] token effort at best, one to soothe my parents’ consciences. Besides, I had no idea what to buy kids age six, nine, eleven, and sixteen. But once at the store, Kim and Becky—high school […]
[…] becoming a Lutheran minister. I had recently completed the application to enter seminary, and I was agonizing over having to endure four more years of school beyond college and moving to a different city […]
[…] Kimball, meanwhile, had returned to Chattanooga and borrowed money from a local Jewish merchant, Barnard Moses, to buy caskets for the slain elders (Kimball 10-20 Aug. 1884; Hatch 1968, 69-78). The stress of these […]