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...knew I was within my mother’s womb and has never stopped. While children from other families went to sleep to fairy tales and the like, the days of my three siblings and I ended with stories from the Bible or from the biographies of famous Christians??Louis Pasteur, Isaac Newton, Mother Theresa, Martin Luther and others...

Author: By Paul C. Schultz, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Finding Catholicism at Harvard | 4/17/2003 | See Source »

This would not be so daunting a task. The Gideons International currently hands out 59 million scriptures a year to hotels, prisons, schools and hospitals around the world. A similar effort to distribute the Constitution, a document accessible to Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and atheists—not just Christians??wouldn’t be any more complicated...

Author: By Nicholas F. B. smyth, | Title: Requisite Reading in Hotel Drawers | 2/12/2003 | See Source »

There are many, many people—and many of these, Christians??who think that “love, justice, and righteousness” require us to stop a brutal dictator who threatens the peace of the world, and who quite conceivably could endow terrorists with tools of apocalyptic slaughter. And they are not limited, as Gomes suggests, to “evangelicals who have found little fault with anything that this administration has done or proposes to do, and who seldom met a war they didn’t like.” This is abusive language...

Author: By Jason L. Steorts, | Title: Preaching Politics | 10/28/2002 | See Source »

...French village of Montaillou in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, these were the only choices possible. The former was espoused by the Catholic Church; the latter, by a group of heretics now known as the Cathars but often referred to in their own time as “Good Christians?? or “Good...

Author: By Benjamin W. Olson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Medieval Pleasures of the Flesh | 2/1/2002 | See Source »

...years ago for the BBC by co-director John Mathew. The play takes place in the fictitious village of Matoor, in the real district of Kerala at the tip of southwest India. Matoor’s population includes people of widely varying religious faiths—Hindus, Muslims and Christians??an assortment that makes for insecure relations and latent hostilities, not to mention some interesting graveyards...

Author: By Tiffany I. Hsieh, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Laughter Hurts in 'Grave Affairs' | 11/2/2001 | See Source »

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