If people-of-faith want to arrest the cultural
flight from religion, we’re going to need to get serious about promoting
healthy marriages, ministering more effectively to divorced families and
children-of-divorce in particular, and finding ways for our churches to be
places that provide a sense of family life for members (e.g., by having things
like movie nights, game nights, parish meals, and other social ministries that
model the kinds of activities traditionally held by families.) There is a
reason the Church teaches that family is the basic unit of society. As
the family goes, so goes the church and politics and the culture as well. Read
complete article at -- http://www.patheos.com/blogs/faithonthecouch/2015/05/losing-my-religion-why-people-are-really-leaving-the-church-its-not-what-you-think/
The witnesses, laying their coats at the feet of Saul, were the men that would cast the first stones at Stephen in Acts 7. Why did they all lay their coats at Saul’s feet? The Talmud contains a very interesting account of the act of stoning that may provide the answer. “When the trial was over, they take him [the condemned person] out to be stoned. The place of stoning was at a distance from the court, as it is said, ‘Take out the one who has cursed.’ [i] A man stands at the entrance of the court; in his hand is a signaling flag [Hebrew sudarin = sudar , ‘scarf, sweater’]. A horseman was stationed far away but within sight of him. If one [of the judges] says, ‘I have something [more] to say in his favor,’ he [the signaler] waves the sudarin , and the horseman runs and stops them [from stoning him]. Even if [the condemned person] himself says, ‘I have something to say in my favor,’ they bring him back, even four of five times, only provided that there is some substance to what he
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