Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
He was the founder and chairman of The Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, which is a research, study, and networking center for growing in a Christian worldview, and which produces Colson's daily radio commentary, BreakPoint, heard on more than 1,400 outlets across the United States currently presented by John Stonestreet. [4] [5]
James Warner Wallace (born June 16, 1961) is an American homicide detective and Christian apologist.Wallace is a Senior Fellow at the Colson Center for Christian Worldview and an adjunct professor of Apologetics at Talbot School of Theology (Biola University) in La Mirada, California.
In 1991, Pearcey and Charles Colson founded BreakPoint Radio, a radio show dedicated to bringing Christian apologetics to a popular audience. Pearcey wrote scripts for the show until November 1999. [4] Starting in 1996, Pearcey co-authored a number of Christianity Today columns with Colson, who provided outlines that Pearcey would turn into drafts.
The 80-year-old Colson died on April 21, 2012, felled by a brain hemorrhage moments after a speech about rising threats to religious liberty.
For the neo-Calvinist, life in all its aspects can be shaped by a distinctively Christian world view. [13] The role of law. For neo-Calvinists, "Law" is more than the Mosaic Decalogue, or even the entire abiding moral will of God. Law is, rather, the order for creation (or creation ordinances) established by God and includes a variety of types ...
Letters to the editor: Center for Christian Virtue protecting misguided views. DeWine must show Trump has no clothes. Flavored tobacco ban useless.
2012 William Wilberforce Award from the Colson Center for Christian Worldview [11] 2012 Inducted by the National Religious Broadcasters into the NRB Hall of Fame [55] * 2017 Named Daniel of the Year by WORLD News Group [56] 2017 Charles W. Colson Courage & Conviction Award from Biola University [57]
"Evangelicals and Catholics Together" is a 1994 ecumenical document signed by leading Evangelical and Catholic scholars in the United States. The co-signers of the document were Charles Colson and Richard John Neuhaus, representing each side of the discussions. [1]