Sadly, I missed Blog Action Day Wednesday. Not for any particular reason; I had planned for some time to write something, and missed it (which, of course, would have been the benefit of scheduling a post a while ago).
To take a small break from my current series, like most of us I've been thinking a lot about the screwed toilet scum really awful status of the American economy and what caused it and what is being done about it.
Recently, I wrote a brief post that relayed some of the pain I believe we should feel at the current state of much of American Evangelicalism. In light of this, I am interested in looking into why this happens to movements in the church, including but not limited to Evangelicalism.
There has recently been a bit of talk surrounding a poll by Faith in Public Life and Mercer University.
For the past few days, the country has been abuzz with talk about Rick Warren's forum that took place at Saddleback Church, in which Barack Obama and John McCain answered some of the questions of evangelicals. During this event, I was on a flight from San Francisco to Atlanta, and thus was able to use AirTran's in-flight XM radio to listen to some of it.
Currently, I'm attending UX Week 2008 in San Francisco. Should you happen to be there, feel free to post a comment.
Since the latter part of the 20th century, one of the things that has been common in all developed countries and the vast majority of developing countries is the presence of an underground culture, or subculture.
If you were interested in this sort of thing, you could boil a person like me down to a list of descriptive terms.
From time to time, I recognize that God is attempting to speak to me about something.
When I was in high school and began getting to know Jesus, it was trendy to compare sharing one's faith to having a cure for cancer that the world desperately needed.
Jonathan Stegall is a web designer and emergent / emerging follower of Jesus currently living in Atlanta, seeking to abide in the creative tension between theology, spirituality, design, and justice.
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