Bloggers' Best for Terri Schiavo
Many fine contributions are still coming in from Beyond the Gate for this round-up of links for Terri Schiavo. Be sure to check back in and look for new entries. Generally, the latest entries are the last ones in each section of the post. (Scroll down one post for the Bloggers' Best for Terri Schiavo.)
Parable of the Lost Shepherd?
In one of those precious little gems of a post that say so much in just a sentence or two, Adrian Warnock passes along some pearly wisdom he heard this weekend.
Also, a link from Adrian's fine blog led me to Desiring God, a site that features the work of John Piper. It looks like a great place to go feed a hungry soul. (And we all get hungry at least three times a day, eh?) Be sure to check out the "Online Library" tab.
Prompting Us to Take Stock
Taking Stock is another thoughtful post from our friend Violet of promptings. This is a lesson I need to heed better, and perhaps you could learn from it, too.
James Arlandson
In his article for The American Thinker, Domestic Violence in the Quran,
James Arlandson takes a scholarly exegetical approach to answer the
question, "Does the Quaran permit husbands to hit their wives or not?" Jim Arlandson
(PhD) teaches world religions and introductory philosophy at a college
in southern California. He has written a book, Women, Class, and
Society in Early Christianity (Hendrickson, 1997)
Responsibility to Kill?
I have always said that if something is true, you can examine all the implications of if and never be reduced to absurdity or untruth. In Does Right to Die Mean a Responsibility to Kill?, Emily Zimmer examines the implications of the notion of a constitutional right to die. From Letters from Babylon.

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Posted by: Uncle Jack | February 22, 2005 at 07:18 AM