- Breaking News Joan's World: Clint Eastwood's son, fructose cookies and 'The
- Breaking News Real Life: Teacher's kind gestures made her role model
- Breaking News Television ratings
- Breaking News Ask Amy: Boss Creepy Uncle is Harassing Manager
Manifesto aims to make 'evangelical' a less-political term
0 Comments | USA TODAY, May, 2008 | by Cathy Lynn Grossman
An "evangelical manifesto" being released today by a group of Christian scholars and theologians is expected to try to take back the term "evangelical" from politics and return it to its theological roots.
"Evangelical" has been widely used to refer to Christians who have conservative political views, but the Evangelical Theological Society requires members to agree on just two points: inerrancy of Scripture, and belief in God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as "separate but equal in attributes and glory" and essential for salvation.
The manifesto condemns Christians on the right and left for "using faith" to express political views "without regard to the truth of the Bible," according to a draft obtained last week by the Associated Press. When faith "loses...
- Getting to the root of beautiful hair: shiny, silky hair begins with a healthy scalp - includes list of resources and a recipe for an herbal scalp tonic
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- Industry Experts Launch Money Management Resources to Help People Overcome Debt and Learn Proper Money Management Practices
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- Managing across borders - roundtable discussion on global competitiveness - includes related articles on grooming international managers and on the US as a foreign market - Panel Discussion
- SmartDisk's New VST Flash Media Reader(TM) Reads SmartMedia(TM), CompactFlash(TM) From A Single Desktop Unit
- John Seely Brown Inducted Into 2004 Industry Hall of Fame
- Banking technology, technological learning and competition: comparative case studies in Thai banking