Do You Know What Your Kids Are Hiding?

Do You Know What Your Kids Are Hiding?

Do You Know What Your Kids Are Hiding?

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 at 7:01am by Robert Siciliano

Many of you as parents may think, “not much” when asked this question. But in reality, it’s probably a lot more than you think. So it should come as no surprise to anyone that McAfee’s 2013 study, Digital Deception: Exploring the Online Disconnect between Parents and Kidswhich examines the online habits and interests of tweens, teens, and young adults, finds there is a significant disconnect between what they do online and what their parents believe they do.

The phrase “liar liar, pants on fire” comes to mind when I hear this topic and the phrase applies to both parents and kids. Parents are lying to themselves if they think they know what their kids are doing online, since 80% said they would not know how to find out what their kids are doing online and 62% do not think that their kids can get into deep trouble online. As for our kids, let’s face it – kids sometimes lie. The study found that 69% of kids say that they know how to hide what they do online from their parents and disturbingly 44% of them cleared their browser history or used private browsing sessions to hide their activity from their parents.

While youth understand the Internet is dangerous, they still engage in risky (and sometimes illegal) behavior. Not only are they hiding this activity from their parents in a variety of ways, but almost half (46%) admit that they would change their behavior if they knew their parents were paying attention.

  • 86% of youth believe that social sites are safe and are aware that sharing personal details online carry risk, yet kids admit to posting personal information such as their email addresses (50%) and phone numbers (32%)
  • 48% have viewed content they know their parents would disapprove of
  • 29% of teens and college aged youth have accessed pirated music or movies online

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READ MORE at https://blogs.mcafee.com/consumer/digital-divide

NYT: Did Religious Liberalism Win the Culture War?

NYT: Did Religious Liberalism Win the Culture War?

A Religious Legacy, With Its Leftward Tilt, Is Reconsidered

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER  —  Published: July 23, 2013

For decades the dominant story of postwar American religious history has been the triumph of evangelical Christians. Beginning in the 1940s, the story goes, a rising tide of evangelicals began asserting their power and identity, ultimately routing their more liberal mainline Protestant counterparts in the pews, on the offering plate and at the ballot box.

But now a growing cadre of historians of religion are reconsidering the legacy of those faded establishment Methodists, Presbyterians and Episcopalians, tracing their enduring influence on the movements for human rights and racial justice, the growing “spiritual but not religious” demographic and even the shaded moral realism of Barack Obama — a liberal Protestant par excellence, some of these academics say.

After decades of work bringing evangelicals, Mormonsand other long-neglected religious groups into the broader picture, these scholars contend, the historical profession is overdue for a “mainline moment.”

As one commenter put it on the blog Religion in American History, “It’s heartening that dead, white, powerful Protestants are getting another look.”

In the last year, some half-dozen books on the subject have been published; Princeton and Yale have held conferences dedicated to religious liberalism, and the recent annual meetings of the American Historical Association and the American Academy of Religion included panel discussions on the topic.

“We now have quite a lot of good stuff on evangelical Protestantism,” said David A. Hollinger, an intellectual historian at the University of California, Berkeley, who delivered a provocative presidential address to the Organization of American Historians in 2011, defending the legacy of what he called ecumenical Protestantism.

“But we ought to be studying the evangelicals,” Mr. Holligner added, in “relation to the people they hated.”

Hated is certainly the word, and the feeling went both ways. In a 1926 editorial on the Scopes trial, TheChristian Century, the de facto house magazine of mainline Protestantism, dismissed fundamentalism as “an event now passed,” a momentary diversion along the march to modern, rational faith.

But by the 1940s evangelicals were mobilizing against the United Nations and other causes endorsed by mainline leaders, many of whom were later denounced as Communists in Christianity Today, the magazine founded in 1956 by the Rev. Billy Graham. The Century shot back, running editorials denouncing Mr. Graham as a Madison Avenue-style huckster leading a “monstrous juggernaut” that threatened to “set back Protestant Christianity a half-century.”

Mr. Graham’s magazine won the immediate battle for readers, surging past The Century in circulation within a year — a sign, Elesha J. Coffman argues in her new book, “The Christian Century and the Rise of the Protestant Mainline,” that The Century’s editors, mostly trained at the same elite institutions, were never as representative of the Protestant majority as they claimed to be.

But other scholars take a markedly different view. In “After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History,” published in April by Princeton University Press, Mr. Hollinger argues that the mainline won a broader cultural victory that historians have underestimated. Liberals, he maintains, may have lost Protestantism, but they won the country, establishing ecumenicalism, cosmopolitanism and tolerance as the dominant American creed.

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Read more at http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/24/books/a-religious-legacy-with-its-leftward-tilt-is-reconsidered.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0

Grace and Obedience both Necessary

Another Bookstore Casualty — O’Gara & Wilson Leaving Hyde Park/Chicago

Another Bookstore Casualty — O’Gara & Wilson Leaving Hyde Park/Chicago

Hyde Park bookstore O’Gara & Wilson closes after decades in operation — Move to Indiana prompted, in part, by ‘toxic environment for small businesses,’ owner says

Doug Wilson, owner of O’Gara and Wilson bookstore in the Hyde Park neighborhood, says a “toxic environment for small businesses” is partly to blame for him closing his shop, which has been a fixture in the neighborhood for more than 50 years. (Terrence Antonio James, Chicago Tribune / June 25, 2013)

By Mugambi Mutegi, Chicago Tribune reporter  —  July 18, 2013

At the O’Gara & Wilson bookstore in the Hyde Park neighborhood, Rory Preston, 25, was packing more than 27,000 books into 900 brown paper bags Tuesday. Each bag was to contain 35 books of the same genre.

Store owner Doug Wilson, 63, was on a ladder with a drill, trying to get the lighting off the ceiling. Removing the wooden shelves was on the to-do list.

The two had been at it since Sunday, when the store, which specialized in used books and was a fixture in Hyde Park for more than 50 years, officially closed. Wilson cited a restrictive business environment in the neighborhood, compounded by dwindling readership, as reasons for the closing.

“The changes in the book trade with the advent of Internet book sales have altered the number and the vitality of bookstores that still exist,” Wilson said at the 1448 E. 57th St. location, which had served the likes of University of Chicago students and faculty to renowned writer Saul Bellow.

Wilson has seen the business shrink irreversibly but believes “there is life in bookstores, but we will continue seeing less of them in select communities that don’t support the culture.”

His plan is to set up shop in Chesterton, Ind., where he lives. He will run the business with his wife, Jill, and is hoping the town’s annual European Market, held between May and October, will provide the boost his business needs.

National chains are hardly immune to the same kinds of forces that helped prompt Wilson’s store to close.

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Read more at http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-0718-bf-bookstore-troubles-20130718,0,7559692.story

New Yorker Reviews “Darwin’s Doubt:” Mis-Reading Meyer

New Yorker Reviews “Darwin’s Doubt:” Mis-Reading Meyer

How “Sudden” Was the Cambrian Explosion? Nick Matzke Misreads Stephen Meyer and the Paleontological Literature; New Yorker Recycles Misrepresentation

Casey Luskin July 16, 2013 11:14 AM

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On June 19, the day after Darwin’s Doubt was first available for purchase, Nick Matzke published a 9400-word “review” of the book in which it appears that he tried to anticipate many of Stephen Meyer’s arguments. Unfortunately, he often either guessed wrong as to what Meyer would say or — assuming he actually read the book as he claims — misread many of Meyer’s specific claims. As I showed in a previous response to Matzke, Matzke repeatedly misquoted Meyer, at one point claiming he referred to the Cambrian explosion as “instantaneous,” when Meyer nowhere makes that claim. Indeed, Matzke faulted Meyer for not recognizing that the Cambrian explosion “was not really ‘instantaneous’ nor particularly ‘sudden.'” Oddly, he also criticized Meyer for not recognizing that the Cambrian explosion “took at least 30 million years” — despite expert opinion showing it was far shorter.

Since Matzke published his review, The New Yorker reviewed Meyer’s book. Gareth Cook, the science writer who wrote the piece, relied heavily on Matzke’s critical evaluation, even though Matzke is a graduate student and not an established Cambrian expert. Cook uncritically recycled Matzke’s claim that the Cambrian explosion took “many tens of millions of years,” even saying that the main problem with Darwin’s Doubt is that Meyer failed to recognize this alleged fact.

DebatingDD.jpegSo, was Matzke right about the length of the Cambrian explosion? In fact, Matzke’s preemptive — or hastily written — review not only misrepresented Meyer’s view, it also misrepresented the length and character of the Cambrian explosion as numerous authoritative peer-reviewed scientific sources on the subject clearly show.

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– See more at: http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/07/how_sudden_was_074511.html#sthash.9Pp3MpO3.dpuf

– See more at: http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/07/how_sudden_was_074511.html#sthash.9Pp3MpO3.dpuf

606 – Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow

606 – Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow

This YouTube vid features Ken Nafziger of Eastern Mennonite Seminary in Harrisonburg, VA, leading a Mennonite group in “606” — as it is known.  It recently became a feature of an extensive discussion among participants of a hymnody discussion board I’m on.  Fair Warning: It might get “in your head” and refuse to go away!

I heard Ken speak about this hymn at a 2008 conference at Pepperdine University in Mailbu, CA.  Using the 1709 Thomas Ken lyrics, “Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow,” it is almost universally known among acapella Mennonite churches as “606” as it was numbered in an older Mennonite hymnal. After singing it in Stouffer Chapel at Pepperdine with Ken leading, I lobbied hard to include it in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs — a new hymnal for which I was co-editor — but it is 3 pages long which could become cumbersome. Ken was gracious enough to come to a lecture I did regarding the new hymnal, and made several valuable suggestions which contributed to the project.

Below is another link to an article discussing the usage of the hymn among acapella Mennonite churches.

What do you think?

http://www.themennonite.org/issues/11-6/articles/606_When_why_and_how_do_Mennonites_use_the_anthem

 

Addendum:

The earliest instance of this tune in print (discovered to-date, that is) is the ninth edition of Lowell Mason’s Boston Handel and Haydn Society Collection in 1830, where it was designated as “Doxology.”  It first appeared in the fifteenth edition (1876) of Harmonia Sacra, entitled “Dedication Anthem,” which is its designation in the Hymnal: A Worship Book, alongside “(606).”     [p. 290, Hymnal Companion, Writer/Compiler – Joan A Fyock, ed. Lani Wright, ©1996, Brethren Press]

Source: http://rockhay.tripod.com/worship/music/606.htm

Little Things

Little Things

Most of us miss out 
on life’s big prizes. 
The Pulitzer. 
The Nobel. 
Oscars. Tonys.
Emmys.
But we’re all eligible
for life’s small pleasures. 
A pat 
on the back. 
A kiss 
behind the ear.
A four pound bass.
A full moon. 
An empty parking space. 
A crackling fire. 
A great meal. 
A glorious sunset. 
Hot soup.
Ice cold lemonade. 
Don’t fret about 
copping life’s grand awards. 
Enjoy its tiny delights. 
There are plenty 
for all of us.

For decades, I had a copy of this on my office wall “in another life,” but don’t know the author.  It often appears attributed to that great writer, “A. Nonymous.”  The Chairman and CEO of United Technologies, Harry J. Gray, ran it as a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal years ago – but I’m not sure he’s the author.  Anyone out there know the story?

On the Edge of Disbelief?

From a Blog I follow – check it out!

Eric Metaxas’ 7 Men And the Secret of Their Greatness – Reviewed by Alan Cornett

Eric Metaxas’ 7 Men And the Secret of Their Greatness – Reviewed by Alan Cornett

Being a Man of Conviction: Eric Metaxas’s ‘7 Men’

Reviewed by Alan Cornett in “Pinstripe Pulpit”

Posted on July 15, 2013

Review of 7 Men And the Secret of Their Greatness, by Eric Metaxas
Thomas Nelson, 2013

7 Men coverGeorge Washington could have been king. William Wilberforce was on a path to be prime minister. Eric Liddell had a guaranteed Olympic gold medal. All of them walked away. But why?

Fresh from blockbuster success of his biographies of Wilberforce and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Eric Metaxas returns to the biographical genre that has treated him so well. This time, rather than a full length biography on a single subject, he has written a set of biographical vignettes of great men of faith and sacrifice, individuals who achieved their greatness by sacrificing for a larger cause.

Metaxas states that his goal is to address two questions with 7 Men: “what is a man?” and “what makes a man great?” Modern manhood is at a crisis, as most of us recognize. Metaxas writes, “Young men who spend their time watching violent movies and playing video games aren’t very easily going to become the men they were meant to become….[I]t is vital that we teach them who they are in God’s view, and it’s vital that we bring back a sense of the heroic.”

Hearkening back to such examples as Plutarch’s Lives and Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, Metaxas believes that to have strong exemplars of what real manhood is an age old method of training for virtue.

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Read more at http://pinstripepulpit.com/being-a-man-of-conviction-eric-metaxass-7-men/

WHAT’S RIGHT, WHAT’S WRONG -17 Phrases You May Be Saying Incorrectly.

WHAT’S RIGHT, WHAT’S WRONG -17 Phrases You May Be Saying Incorrectly.

WHAT’S RIGHT, WHAT’S WRONG

Who would have thought that so many people misuse the most common phrases? Let’s take a look at 17 phrases you may be saying incorrectly.

“I could care less” and “I could literally eat a horse” are two of the most commonly misused phrases in the English language. While you may or may not be using them correctly, chances are you hear phrases being misused all the time — and it’s probably one of your biggest pet peeves! Let’s look at 17 of the most commonly misused phrases and learn the proper way to say them. We won’t tell anyone if you forward it to a few people you may know.

Read more ….

http://www.sheknows.com/living/articles/1003885/17-phrases-youre-probably-saying-wrong