The Dogmat: Preaching, Double Spaces, and Unfair Readings to Kids

The Dogmat: Preaching, Double Spaces, and Unfair Readings to Kids May 14, 2015

Dogmat

The Dogmat saw quite a lot this week: on preaching, the post-mortem accessibility of double-spaces, the inhumanity of reading to your kids, and What Would Patsy Do?

Preaching: What Works? Why Does it Matter?: Jen Fitz tells us some things the Dogmat thinks we really ought to keep in mind while preaching the Gospel.

You Can Have My Double Space When You Pry it From My Cold, Dead Hands: The Dogmat favors fixed pitch fonts, and is glad that others agree.

BeingLiberal.org Brings the Stupid: The Dogmat would have picked a different headline, but thinks that Tom McDonald has a good point.

Top Ten Ways You’re Giving Your Kids an Unfair Advantage: Larry D deconstructs a bit of Australian lunacy about how reading to your kids is harmful…to the kids whose parents don’t read to them.

The Happiest Sound in the World: Steven Greydanus writes happily about The Sound of Music.

The First Epistle of St. Paul to the Cartoonists: Mark Shea makes a point that the Dogmat has often pondered: not everything that is legal (and truly ought to be legal) is good for us to do.

Trotify: Because the Dogmat knows you want to bring it the full Monty Python when you ride your bicycle. Come, Patsy! To Camelot!


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