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Holiday Articles
- Let Us Resolve This . . . - New Year's insert. "Do we find that we are frequently successful in making significant and lasting changes by means of this annual form of sincere commitment?"
- Game Turned Shame: I Actually Bought It! - Father's Day insert. "At the end of the day, he always wanted the best for me. He would pay a price to see that it happened."
- She Loved It! - Mother's Day insert exploring the beauty, nobility of character and Christlikeness of a Christian mother.
- A Valentine "Form Jimmy" - "Christ accepts his family without condition. He did not accept us because we are something special. He accepted us in the same way we are to accept others, cooties and all. And Valentines Day, whether it is in the Bible or not, is as good a starting place for that kind of love as any other day."
- Here's the Skinny on Fat Tuesday - "Carnival comes from a combination of Latin words meaning "farewell to the flesh." There is a great deal of irony in that name because Fat Tuesday is by no means a time when the desires of the flesh are denied or bid farewell."
- What Does Luck Have to Do with It? - "When we analyze national tragedy we sometimes recoil from the notion that God could be in control of His world. We seek to protect God from such an accusation. But the Scriptures don't do this."
- October 31st, 1517, Wittenburg, Germany - "Like Martin Luther, you may come by faith alone to Christ alone even now, all these years later. "
- Not Much to Be Thankful For - "What if you were called on this Thanksgiving to give a report of what you were thankful for? If you could say, not what you ought to say, but what is strictly true, what would come out of your mouth? What makes you really happy?"
- But I Don't Feel Thankful - Thanksgiving article tells about the difficulties faced by the Pilgrims in their first year in the New World, and presents a gospel message.
- 'Tis the Season to be Jolly? - Article for the Christmas season exploring the emptiness of materialism.
- Christmas: Bah Humbug or Gloria in Excelsis?
"Today Christmas is almost entirely secularized. It is a merchant's most profitable period as eager shoppers raid their shelves. Can we be any more comfortable with a secular Christmas than the religiously-loaded Christmas the Puritans detested?"
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