A Reflection on “Lament for a Son”
I picked up the book a few weeks after my 14 month-old had passed. What I read crushed my soul, or should I say shined a light on my own crushed soul.
Read MoreI picked up the book a few weeks after my 14 month-old had passed. What I read crushed my soul, or should I say shined a light on my own crushed soul.
Read MoreThe scholar who changed the world.
Read MoreThe Dumb Ox None Could Silence.
Read MoreAthanasius against the world
Read MoreWhile he lived a Christ-centered life, Polycarp is most known for his Caesar-defying death.
Read MoreThe Lytle brothers present: The Top Ten Petra Albums of all time.
Read MoreWe killed National Selfie Day.
Read MoreDavid Lytle concludes his series on the Puritans and their dream of “a universally enlightened society.”
Read MorePart 2: The Puritan Philosophy of Education In 1646, in the midst of the English Civil War, leaders of the
Read MoreThe Puritans were a people committed to one consuming idea—the knowledge and worship of God through the Holy Scriptures. Because of the need to read the Bible, this consuming idea led to the greatest educational reforms the world had yet seen.
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