An Outline of What Is Marriage?

INC's avatarUpstream Politics

Wedding Cake Ornament1959
What Is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense by Sherif Girgis, Ryan T. Anderson, and Robert George, is a brief book, but it is weighted with hefty arguments. Its 97 pages of text plus appendix, notes, and index, is an expanded revision of their article, What Is Marriage?, published in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy in winter of 2010. The introduction charts the course of their defense and the chapter titles signal the major points of their argument.

What Is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense

Introduction

1. Challenges to Revisionists

2. Comprehensive Union

3. The State and Marriage

4. What’s the Harm?

5. Justice and Equality

6. A Cruel Bargain?

7. Conclusion

Whenever I read a book I usually try to find out something about the authors. I’d previously heard of Robert George as a pro-life champion and founder of the American Principles Project

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Natural Disasters

Natural Disasters

From “Hankering for History” —

Alright everybody, here is an article from the guys over at HistoricNaturalDisasters.com! They are finishing up a photo project for the centennial of the series of floods and tornadoes that devastated the Midwest in March of 1913. They need help matching “unknown location” images to current locations. The best part is that there is a $100 cash prize for one lucky winner that participates in the contest. So check out the article, then check out the contest information below. Enjoy!

From March 21st to the 27th, 1913, the United States experienced a series of late winter storms that together led to one of the worst natural disasters in US history – but one that is rarely talked about today. Starting in Nebraska and then northern Ohio and spreading out to affect states as far away as New York and Louisiana, these storms brought tornadoes and later flooding to a large swath of the Midwest and parts of the East coast, and changed how many cities prepare and react to natural disasters.

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24th Lake, 1913

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24th Lake, 2013

From March 21st through the 23rd, 1913, tornadoes originating in Nebraska ripped across these states as well as Louisiana, Alabama, Kansas, and Georgia. Nebraska, however, was the hardest hit. On the 23rd, Easter Sunday, a tornado sliced through the middle of downtown Omaha before traveling over the border in Council Bluffs, Iowa and dying off. What was left in Omaha after the storm was at risk of burning due to fires that were spreading through the city, fed by broken gas lines. The destruction to the city was extensive by the time the dust had settled, with the Omaha Daily News reporting that damages were in excess of $8 million ($187 million today) and that 115 had been killed.

After the tornadoes had done their damage, the rains came, originating from the same weather systems that had spawned the twisters. As the storms moved over northern Ohio, particularly in the Great Miami watershed area, it rained constantly from March 21st to the 26th. Major river towns such as Columbus, Memphis, Pittsburgh, Albany, and Philadelphia were among those eventually flooded.

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134 West Fourth, 1913

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134 West Forth, 2013

Dayton, Ohio, experienced the worst flooding of all. Dayton was built in the banks of the Great Miami River and had experienced flooding in the past, but nothing as devastating as what occurred on March 25, when the levees along the Great Miami started to break, sending water rushing into the streets. According to the Ohio Historical Society, by the next day the downtown area was in up to 20 feet of water. The exact figures vary depending on the source, but according to the Miami Conservancy District, an estimated 360 people were killed and the property damage in Dayton totaled over $100 million ($2 billion today).

As the storms moved east into Indiana they showed no signs of slowing down. A tornado had already passed through Terra Haute on the 23rd, killing 21, and the state experienced heavy flooding for the remainder of the week. In Indianapolis, the levees around the west side of the city broke, and it was filled with nearly 30 feet of water. The White Water River in Brookville was so high that some bridges acted like dams, slowing the water’s flow. When these bridges broke under the pressure, a tidal wave roared down the river for miles, engulfing Cedar Grove and New Trenton. In Indiana alone there were over than 180 bridges completely destroyed by the raging waters.

There is no definitive way to know for certain how many lives were lost during this terrible week of tornadoes and floods, but estimates typically range into the thousands. In Dayton, cleanup efforts would take more than a year and the economy would not recover fully for over a decade.

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Fourth and Main, 1913

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Fourth and Main, 2013

Not everything that came from the storm was negative, however. The Great Dayton Flood was viewed afterward as the ultimate field training for the then newly formed Red Cross, their first large-scale test before being sent to aid wounded troops overseas during World War I. The concept of the “community chest” charity emerged from volunteer efforts in Cleveland during the 1913 floods, and would later become known as the United Way.

Thanks so much to Hankering for History for letting us share a piece of this historical project on HankeringForHistory.com. We’re humbled by the interest in this project, and we really hope you enjoyed this snippet of history!

We’d also like to thank some of the great archives and archivists who have done so much work to help preserve the amazing history of the 1913 flood, including the Dayton Metro Library and historian Trudy Bell. The amount of history compiled at these two websites is truly amazing. Lastly, thanks to Jason from InsuranceTown.com, who lent us some of the resources we used to help prepare content for the web and publish our blog, and inspired our Mapping History Contest.

Don’t forget to check out HistoricNaturalDisasters.com for more images, and for information on our Mapping History Contest – help us figure out the locations pictured in historic photos from 1913 and you could win $100!

Read more: http://www.hankeringforhistory.com/2013/04/05/historic-natural-disasters-guest-post/#ixzz2PvlJ5whV

Footnote 14 – Virkler and Ayayo, Hermeneutics

Footnote 14 – Henry A. Virkler and Karelynne Gerber Ayayo, Hermeneutics: Principles and Processes of Biblical Interpretation (2nd ed.; Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2007), pp. 195, 197.

“The story of Nadab and Abihu is interesting both because of its brevity and because and because of the sternness and uniqueness of the judgment on them… God had carefully shown the way by which the Israelites might atone for their sins and maintain a right relationship with himself. The distinctions between holy and unholy, clean and unclean, had been clearly demonstrated by God to Aaron and his sons, who had been instructed to teach these things to the people. Nadab and Abihu, in an act of self-will, had substituted their own form of worship, obscuring the distinction between the holy (God’s commands) and the common (man’s self-initiated religious actions).  These actions, had they not been quickly rebuked, might easily have led to the assimilation of personal pagan practices in the worship of God.

“A second lesson is found in the fact that reconciliation with God depends on the grace of God, not on man’s self-willed and self-initiated practices. The means of reconciliation and atonement had been given by God. Nadab and Abihu attempted to add something to God’s means of reconciliation. As such they stand as an example to all people and all religions that substitute their own actions for God’s grace as the means of reconciliation and salvation.”

A HYMN FOR TODAY – Thou Art Merciful, O Father

A HYMN FOR TODAY

Thou art merciful, O Father,
Full of pity, love and grace;
Thou wilt not forever chasten,
Nor in anger hide Thy face.
High as heaven, vast and boundless,
Hath Thy lovingkindness been;
Far as east from west is distant
Hast Thou put away our sin.

Like a Father’s tender pity
Is God’s mercy toward His own;
For He knows our frame, rememb’ring
We are dust, our days soon gone.
Like a flower, blooming, fading,
Like the grass, we pass away;
But God’s righteousness and mercy
On His children rest alway.

In the heavens, well established,
Is His universal throne;
For His kingdom ruleth ever,
And His sway all kings shall own.
Bless Jehovah, ye His angels,
Bless Him, hosts of His control,
Bless Jehovah, all His creatures,
Bless Jehovah, O my soul!

8.7.8.7.D – Elmer L. Jorgenson, 1921

From Psalm 103:8-22

Tune: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1778
arr. Elmer L. Jorgenson, 1921

#28 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012

British Excavation at Ur

British Excavation at Ur

Ancient Sumerian site excavated

Excavation of Tell Kahiber

Ferrell Jenkins's avatarFerrell's Travel Blog

Mike Addelman, Press Officer of the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Manchester, has been kind enough to provide us with some photos of the recent excavation of Tell Kahiber.

Some of us might easily drive past the ancient mound without realizing that it was an ancient archaeological site. Prof. Stuart Campbell and Dr. Jane Moore, both of Manchester University, and independent archaeologist Robert Killick, first recognized important features of the tell on satellite images.

Tell Kahiber is located close to Tell Mugheir, thought by some scholars to be the biblical Ur of the Chaldeans, the home of Abraham (Genesis 11:28-31; 15:7). Historically we know this area to be Sumer. The following map from Bible Atlas shows the general area.

The New International Dictionary of Biblical Archaeology points out,

There are no direct references to Sumer in the Bible, although it corresponds to the “land of Shinar”…

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A HYMN FOR TODAY – Beneath the Cross of Jesus

A HYMN FOR TODAY

Beneath the cross of Jesus
I fain would take my stand,
The shadow of a mighty rock
Within a weary land,
A home within the wilderness,
A rest upon the way,
From the burning of the noontide heat
And the burden of the day.

There lies beneath its shadow,
But on the farther side,
The darkness of an awful grave
That gapes both deep and wide,
And there between us stands the cross,
Two arms outstretched to save,
A watchman set to guard the way
From that eternal grave.

Upon that cross of Jesus
Mine eye at times can see
The very dying form of one
Who suffered there for me;
And from my smitten heart with tears
Two wonders I confess:
The wonders of redeeming love
And my unworthiness.

I take, O cross, thy shadow
For my abiding place;
I ask no other sunshine than
The sunshine of His face;
Content to let the world go by,
To know no gain or loss,
My sinful self my only shame,
My glory all the cross.

Irr. – Elizabeth C. Clephane, 1869

Tune: ST. CHRISTOPHER – Frederick C. Maker, 1881

#537 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Song, 2012

Verse 2 is too often omitted from some hymnals

Stephen Jenks – Singing Master

Stephen Jenks – Singing Master.

Huberman’s List: Saved from the Holocaust

Huberman’s List: Saved from the Holocaust

A HYMN FOR TODAY – How Firm a Foundation

A HYMN FOR TODAY

How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord,
Is laid for your faith in His excellent word!
What more can He say than to you He hath said,
You who unto Jesus for refuge have fled?

“Fear not, I am with thee, O be not dismayed,
For I am thy God and will still give thee aid;
I’ll strengthen thee, help thee, and cause thee to stand,
Upheld by My gracious, omnipotent hand.”

“When through the deep waters I cause thee to go,
The rivers of sorrow shall not overflow,
For I will be with thee, thy troubles to bless,
And sanctify to thee thy deepest distress.”

“When through fiery trials thy pathway shall lie,
My grace, all-sufficient, shall be thy supply.
The flame shall not hurt thee; I only design
Thy dross to consume and thy gold to refine.”

“E’en down to old age all My people shall prove
My sov’reign, eternal, unchangeable love;
And when graying hairs shall their temples adorn,
Like lambs they shall still in My bosom be borne.”

“The soul that on Jesus hath leaned for repose
I will not, I will not desert to his foes;
That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
I’ll never, no never, no never forsake.”

11.11.11.11 – Rippon’s Selection of Hymns (1787)

Tune: FOUNDATION – Funk’s Genuine Church Music, 1832
arr. Rigdon M. McIntosh, 1866

#400 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012