2011-06-24T15:05:13-04:00

It is one of the cruelest ironies of the modern abortion movement that while the movement advanced under the banner of women’s rights, it is unborn girls, in monstrously disproportionate number, who have been aborted. If you must read only one thing this weekend, it should be Jonathan Last’s book review of “Unnatural Selection” by Mara Hvistendahl in today’s Wall Street Journal.  Hvistendahl’s book treats the spread of sex-based abortion and the deleterious consequences for societies that systematically abort females.  Read... Read more

2011-06-23T17:41:57-04:00

Remind me to send Jesse Ellison a thank-you card.  Without the benefit of her insight, I would never have realized that I’m not a conservative. Conservative circles, she says, “regularly deny that date rape exists.”  And Ellison writes for The Daily Beast, which means she basically knows everything there is to know about conservatism.  Therefore, I must not be a conservative. Because I believe that date rape exists.  And I believe that what Bristol Palin describes in her memoir Not... Read more

2011-06-23T12:34:12-04:00

An interesting story appeared today’s New York Daily News about a 13-year-old child prodigy who began reading at 2, writing poetry at 3, and is now bound for college at UConn.  Which raises the question: what kind of slacker is she that she couldn’t get into a better school? Just kidding, just kidding.  An impressive girl, and a homeschooler to boot.  I’ve known children who skipped multiple grades, and in those cases I thought it had much more to do... Read more

2011-06-23T01:11:02-04:00

Note: This is part of a series on Christianity and Homosexuality. See the introduction and first installment. "Do you think I just woke up one morning and chose to be gay? Why on earth would anyone choose to be scorned and outcast, to face the prejudice, to be disowned, to give up the 'perfect' wedding and the 'perfect' kids? It would be so much easier if I were straight, but I can't just turn it on and off like flipping a light switch." We've all heard objection before, on television, in the movies, or in real life from friends, family members or perfect strangers. It's very powerful rhetoric. It has at least one problem. The human mind is an exceedingly complex thing, and the motivations for identity-shaping decisions are among the most inscrutable. In other words, people choose to do all sorts of things that are not apparently in their self-interest. "Do you think I would just choose to be a Muslim/Mormon/Pagan/Atheist in a society where that's frowned upon? It would have been so much easier to remain a Protestant." "Do you think I would just choose to become a communist in a family of capitalists?" "...a drug addict?" "...a career criminal?" "...a servant to the poor in Calcutta?" I'm not likening homosexuals and drug addicts -- so let's not play that game. I'm saying that people do all sorts of things with adverse consequences for all sorts of reasons. To express our independence, to spite our parents, to give society the middle-finger, to express anger, to express hatred, to identify with a favored victim group, to draw closer to a loved one, to run away from a loved one, do distract ourselves, to numb the pain, and even to destroy ourselves. Why does a person choose to become a suicide bomber? But sometimes poor arguments are offered for true propositions. The basic point is correct: No one simply chooses to become any of those things. But that doesn't mean they bear no moral responsibility for what they have become, and it certainly doesn't mean they have no responsibility for what they become henceforth. Now, don't respond yet to what I wrote in the above paragraph, because you don't know where I'm going with this. Let's do something difficult: Forget for a moment that we're talking about homosexuality. Bracket that question. I want to make a very simple but powerful and important conceptual distinction -- and then, in the next post, return to the homosexuality question. I am going to claim: We should not be considering whether homosexuality is a free choice. We should be considering whether it's voluntary. I'll share my answer that question in the next part of this series -- and the answer may surprise you. Read more

2011-06-22T11:28:55-04:00

Michelle Obama has been appearing at churches, including evangelical churches, to speak on health, fitness and the dangers of obesity.  I recently heard from a member of North Point Church, Andy Stanley’s church in the northern suburbs of Atlanta, that Michelle Obama appeared there last February.  Meghan Clyne at the Weekly Standard wrote about it in April. The outreach is directed through the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, which has come under criticism for pressing a more partisan agenda than the office... Read more

2011-06-21T14:52:36-04:00

Note: This is part of a series on Christianity and Homosexuality.  See the introduction here. This question — Have we loved the gay community? — is, to my mind, the first and most important question we must ask when it comes to the thicket of entangled issues and controversies found in the relationship between Christianity and homosexuality.  We worship as God incarnate a person who taught us to look first to the plank in our own eyes before we look... Read more

2011-06-21T12:20:10-04:00

Al Mohler is President of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, an intellectual leader of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), and one of the pillars of theological and social conservatism within the denomination.  Yet he’s fallen in hot water with recent comments condemning the ways in which conservative Christians have spoken of homosexuality.  Here’s what he told Jonathan Merritt in an interview: “We’ve lied about the nature of homosexuality and have practiced what can only be described as a form of... Read more

2011-06-18T10:16:10-04:00

I’m presently trapped in travel purgatory — my attempts to return to Atlanta last night were thwarted by thunderstorms around New York City — and unable to post the usual content.  But I thought I would share an article I came across. In my recent post on Mitt Romney’s Mormon beliefs and whether they ought to concern voters (to which I answered in the negative), I mentioned the argument that Mormon beliefs are simply so irrational and so plainly divorced... Read more

2011-06-16T16:54:28-04:00

Are Mormon beliefs a legitimate cause for concern for those who might otherwise vote for Mitt Romney? Are there particular beliefs that might hinder a Mormon President in the execution of his duties? Or are Mormon beliefs in general so bizarre, so irrational, that they indicate a kind of untrustworthiness in the individual who believes them? This is the third in a three-part series responding to Warren Cole Smith’s “A Vote for Romney is a Vote for the LDS Church.”... Read more

2011-06-14T17:43:23-04:00

I had promised to finish my series on Mitt Romney and Mormonism today, but last night I wrote a piece on Father’s Day for Six Seeds and wanted to post that instead.  You can find it below.  Please subscribe to the RSS feed, connect with me by Facebook or Twitter, or tune in tomorrow to see the conclusion of that series — and thanks to the many folks who have left thoughtful and impassioned comments. Read more


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